Saturday 30 May 2020

Black Trans Man Tony McDade Killed By Florida Police



On Wednesday 27th May Florida trans man Tony McDade was fatally shot and killed by a white police officer in a further incident of police violence towards the BIPOC community. The news of this incident came out during protests across the United States due to the police murder of another black man, George Floyd.

According to information from the Tallahassee police, Tony was a suspect in a stabbing incident. Tony was identified as the main suspect by the as of yet unnamed victim. This seems to be backed up by a post on Tony's social media, where he released a video stating that he wanted revenge for a beating that he was the victim of.

In the video Tony says 'You killed me, I'm gonna kill you'. He also said that this would lead to a stand-off with police. In his final post to Facebook he said 'I'm living suicidal right now'.

The police followed public tips for a person matching Tony's description, which led to a confrontation with him. According to Chief Lawrence Revell, Tony was armed with a gun and 'made a move consistent with using the firearm against the officer'. Rather than arrest Tony, the police shot and killed him. It has not been confirmed if any of the officers present at the incident were wearing a body-cam, or if their are any witnesses to the incident to corroborate that Tony was armed and threatening police officers; though according to the Human Rights Campaign several people managed to record the event.

Initial police and media reports about the incident misgendered Tony and used the incorrect name and pronouns. Thankfully friends and family came forward to correctly identify him.

Around 30 members of the local community gathered to hold a candlelight vigil following the killing. Residents from his apartment complex have also created a memorial next to a tree in the area where he was killed.

Following the incident the Executive Director of the National Black Justice Coalition released a statement to say 'It pains me to have learned about Tony McDade, who we understand was killed by a member of the Tallahassee Police Department yesterday morning. This tragic incident should be a reminder that hate crimes against Black LGBTQ/SGL people happen too frequently - often without the national public outcry that our cis and/or heteronormative brothers and sisters receive'.

Tori Cooper, the director off community engagement for the Transgender Justice Initiative at the Human Rights Campaign also released a statement. 'The Human Rights Campaign and the entire transgender and non-binary community demand accountability and answers for Tony’s death, and countless violent deaths of trans people, Black people and, disproportionately, Black transgender people. While these deaths are visible due to recordings and social media, we know far too many go completely ignored. Black people, LGBTQ people, and especially all LGBTQ people of colour are at greater risk for violence every day in this country. This must end. Our hearts are heavy as we mourn with Tony’s family and friends.'

According to the Human Rights Campaign, who track as many incidents as possible, at least another eleven other transgender or gender-nonconforming people have been violently killed in the US in 2020. This also marks yet another incident of a black person who has been killed by the police.

Police Chief Lawrence Revell said in a press conference that their was 'no indication' that the police officers involved acted wrongly, or that the killing was racially motivated.


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Thursday 28 May 2020

Space Precinct Episode 2 'Double Duty' - TV Review



I continue to be surprised that Space Precinct used to be shown during the early evenings when it first aired in the 90's, as this episode really leans into the horror side of sci-fi when a horrific alien creature commits brutal murders against a series of drug kingpins.

The episode opens with Officers Brogan and Haldane engaged in surveillance of a local drug dealer, Oturi Nissim. Having failed to find any evidence that Nissim is dealing in illegal black crystals during a raid, the duo are keeping an eye on his apartment to keep the pressure on the criminal. After they observe a pizza delivery being made to the apartment the mutilated body of Nissim lands on their police cruiser. When they investigate the apartment they find Nissim's body guards torn to pieces, and a young woman as the only survivor.

Investigating into the mysterious pizza delivery guy, they discover a much larger ring of black crystal smugglers, using the pizza delivery as a front. However, the thing that killed Nissim begins to take out the other dealers, before eventually appearing on the precinct house and attacking Officer Orrin.

The episode starts very strong, and the initial attack upon Nissim's apartment is done well, building up tension as Nissim discovers the remains of his men. Sadly, there were two things that distracted me slightly in these beginning moments. The first was that it seemed a little obvious that Aleesha, the pretty young woman who survived the attack, was the one responsible for the killings. The other thing was that the pizza delivery guy was played by Idris Elba. Whilst that's not distracting enough, he' been dubbed over by long time Gerry Anderson voice actor David Healy, who gives him a kind of cowboy-like accent.


After these opening moments the episode has the main duo trying to get to the bottom of the killings, which gives us a fun little police chase with amazing model work, as well as an intense shootout with a pair of drug dealers.

Despite their best efforts to try and track down the mysterious killer Brogan and Haldane struggle to make any traction, and begin to become suspects themselves as the only people to be present at both sets of killings. Whilst Captain Podly doesn't seem to believe this, it's a good world building moment when he tells them the mayor is clamouring for answers and pointing the finger at a pair of 'rogue' cops. We've not really learnt much about the workings of Demeter City outside of the police, but this throwaway line lets us know that the police don't operate in a vacuum, that they are answerable to people and the public can sway opinion.

Toward the end of the episode the characters begin to piece together the answer to the mystery, in part thanks to a sub-plot involving Brogan's son Matthew. This leads to a violent confrontation with Aleesha in her monster form that ends with the characters gunning her down. It's brutal and fast, and over before you've really had the chance to realise what's going on. I also refer to Aleesha's other form as a monster because whilst all of the other aliens we've seen in Space Precinct all seem like people, just ones that look different from us, Aleesha's other form is more of a feral beast, more akin to a wild animal than a person.


The episode also has a couple of sub-plots going on in the background. The first one, as I'd mentioned before, does tie into the main story as it helps Brogan to piece together what's happening. It involves his son Matthew and his new friend Inazy, who Brogan doesn't really like. He comes from a poorer part of the city, and is presented to be something of a tearaway, and when Brogan sees them with a strange bottle of glowing liquid he begins to suspect they're up to no good. However, it turns out that Inazy is actually a really good kid, and that the two teens have just been working on a school project together.

It's kind of nice that the episode worked this story in. Not only does it build on the Brogan family as seen in the first episode, who seemed a bit dull there, but it also adds to the message of the episode of not judging people by their first appearance. The sweet and innocent girl is actually a brutal killer, and the untrustworthy youth is a really good kid who's trying to do well at school. The two play into each other well, that even the moment when Brogan figures things out doesn't feel too corny as it's in a nice character scene.

The other sub-plot, on the other hand, seems to be something completely throw away, and feels like its in the episode to pad out the running time and to give the women something to do. It might seem a bit mean to say this, but the whole plot about the old bag lady who turns out to be a lost alien queen adds nothing to the other story, and this is the second episode in a row where both Officer Castle and Officer Took seem to be relegated to the background. I really hope that this isn't the start of a pattern where the female officers keep getting given pointless sub-plots to keep them sidelined.

'Double Duty' definitely leans into the sci-fi side of things more than the first episode did, but seems to find a really nice balance of science fiction and police procedural. It also continues to display great model work that gets utilised in brilliant chase sequences, though some of the other effects definitely haven't aged as well. A solid second episode for the series.




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Wednesday 27 May 2020

Predator Stalking Shadows by James A. Moore and Mark Morris - Book Review



'In the aftermath of the events of Predator 2, U.S. Marine Scott Devlin is assigned to the clean-up operation in Los Angeles. He is soon thrust into a world of secretive government agents, highly-advanced technology, and an unstoppable juggernaut lone agent, Alan ‘Dutch’ Schaefer.

As Devlin rises through the ranks, working in elite counter-terrorist units, he gathers evidence, slowly piecing together the shocking truth of what he saw that night. Fighting for freedom from the jungles of South America to the Scottish Highlands, Devlin learns who the real enemy is, and how to fight for survival.

'He’s not the only one fighting back against the Hunters. Dutch has been working in the shadows ever since his first encounter in Central America, gathering knowledge, weapons, and team mates. Fighting both the Hunters and shadowy government agencies, Dutch and Devlin must team up to take the fight to the aliens – to become the predators.'

The Predator franchise has it's highs and lows, but generally has some very good films. The first three films in the series are all good for various different reasons, and whilst 2018's The Predator was generally seen as a disappointment that's still only one of the four films that's really classed as bad. Over the years the franchise has tried to expand out into different mediums, such as novels, comics, and video games. Whilst it's received acclaim in comics and games, novels tends not to be a medium where people sing its praises as much.

I've found that this can sometimes come down to the fact that it an be hard to capture a lot of the tension and horror that the films have on the written page, and that Predator books can sometimes feel a little flat. This is most certainly not the case with Predator Stalking Shadows, as I found it to not only be incredibly engaging and character driven, but at times was genuinely scary too.

Predator Stalking Shadows doesn't focus on just one event, on a singular predator incursion, and this really works to its advantage. Instead we follow Scott Devlin, a member of the US Marines, over the course of a number of decades as he slowly begins to learn the truth about the existence of these extraterrestrial hunters, and becomes drawn into the fight against them. As such, the book becomes more about him than the titular monsters; and this is such a good thing.

We get to see Scott as a relatively young man, fresh onto a special unit and going out on top secret missions. We get to see him get to know the soldiers around him, and we get to come to care for them the same way that he does. This means that when Scott and his comrades eventually end up in positions where they're going up against the Yautja you are hoping that these people make it through these encounters, and become genuinely heartbroken when some of them don't.

Not only was this so refreshing a development, I genuinely shed a couple of tears during one particularly poignant funeral scene, but I think it's probably the first time that I've ever really cared about a character death in the entire Predator franchise. Yes, it's disappointing when the cool marines die in the first film, and I genuinely hoped that Danny Trejo would have lasted longer in Predators, but this was the first time that I found myself caring about them as people, upset that they were leaving wives and children behind when they passed away.

But this is what the book is really good at. It's not a book about the spectacle of the predators, or the horror of being in their hunting ground, it's a story about the people in these situations. It's one of the most grounded, human stories in the entire franchise.

The book also features the return of Arnold Schwarzenegger's Dutch, and shows what he's been doing in the years since the first Predator film. He's the character that we occasionally see fighting the predators, and whilst these moments are fairly fleeting they do help to carry the story along, giving readers brief moments of action as the rest of the book works on character and world building. For as many times as we get to see Dutch in action against the creatures we also get second hand stories about what he's been doing and how his mission has been getting on. Rather than feeling cheated by these, hoping for a 'show don't tell' approach instead, they feel a lot more real. We're supposed to be following Scott and his particular journey, so it makes sense to stick with him and instead of seeing Dutch's moments seeing them through Scott's eyes; which is learning about them after the fact.

I don't know much about the game that this is setting up, Predator Hunting Grounds, and imagine that it's more laying some very background framework for the game and explaining why Dutch is still around, as I do know he appears in the game. But I have to be honest, I wouldn't have cared half as much about the game before reading this book. The book makes it feel like there's a more cohesive world inside the Predator franchise, it makes it feel like the films and this new game are connecting in more than just name and IP. And better yet, the book manages to stand on its own and stays a brilliant piece of work without needing to connect into the game.

Predator Stalking Shadows is easily one of the best Predator novels that I've read. It captures the feel and tension of the films without relying on it to make its story. It centres on realistic people, it makes you care about the characters and the world in ways the franchise hasn't before. A masterful piece of fiction.




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Tuesday 26 May 2020

Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer - Book Review



'Twelve-year-old Artemis Fowl is a millionaire, a genius, and above all, a criminal mastermind. But even Artemis doesn't know what he's taken on when he kidnaps a fairy, Captain Holly Short of the LEPrecon Unit. These aren't the fairies of bedtime stories—they're dangerous! Full of unexpected twists and turns, Artemis Fowl is a riveting, magical adventure.'

I'd heard about the Artemis Fowl books for a while, but had never gotten around to reading them despite managing to acquire the entire series. This was largely due to having worked in a charity shop before becoming too ill to work and the set coming in one day. When the upcoming film was announced, and with the set sitting on a shelf in my library, I decided that it was probably about time that I got round to actually reading one.

To be honest, I'm not really sure what I was expecting going into it, I knew that Artemis is supposed to be some kind of super villain kid, and that their are fairies and magical creatures, but I wasn't expecting such a small story.

I've found that a lot of stories that involve younger people discovering about a hidden world of magic or the supernatural tend to take on a grand tone to it. Harry is the chosen one in Harry Potter, and whilst we don't learn the significance and importance of what Valkyrie Cain will become in Skulduggery Pleasant she does help defeat a powerful evil. These books throw the heroes into grand adventure and high stakes, but that's not the case with Artemis Fowl.

This could be because in essence Artemis isn't the hero of this particular story, but it the bad guy, but I think it also came down to the fact that despite involving fairies, trolls, and dwarfs, this story was about kidnapping and ransom. There was no grand adventure or any epic revelations, it's just about a group of police officers trying to get one of their colleagues back from a kidnapper.

I think that this might be part of the reason why I didn't really feel like the book clicked with me at any point. There was nothing overtly wrong with it, and it was entertaining enough, but it never really drew me in or made me care about anyone. There was a point in the book where it looked like one of the main characters was dead, and I didn't really care. There was no shock or disappointment, no cheer as it was revealed they were okay; I was reading it with a sense of detachment.

This was one of the biggest issues for me, that I felt detached for the whole book. I didn't learn enough about the fairy folk or their world to find them interesting, and the stuff I did learn seemed to only ever be related to the specific things happening their and then. Because of this I didn't really care that their world might become exposed, because I didn't know what their world was already. I didn't every learn enough about Artemis to care about his plots either. Yes, he wants money to try and continue to get by with his rich lifestyle, and to perhaps find his father; but he came across as a device to start the plot rather than a real person.

The characters that felt the most real were the non-human ones, but thanks to the pace at which the story progressed we never got to spend enough time with them to see what they were really like. They were always reacting to things, and the readers never got a chance to see what they were like in anything but a 'work' scenario. I get that these characters are fairy cops, but they're also people. Show that a bit more. Show what Holly's thinking, about how being taken prisoner is effecting her; then I'll start to care if she makes it out or not.

There are a lot of books aimed at younger readers that are able to keep adults entertained too, many of which have gone on to become globally successful franchises. I have to be honest though, I don't see much of that on offer in Artemis Fowl. The book is fine, and it will certainly appeal to the intended age group, but I don't think it's got enough to it to grab people who come to it later in life. I understand that this might be something that changes with the series over time, as a lot of books seem to mature as they progress through a series, growing with their fans, so I'll probably give the second book a go and see if this is the case here.




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Thursday 21 May 2020

In The Graveyard Antemortem by Stephen Stromp - Book Review



'Seventeen-year-old Lisa Jacobs is determined to solve her father's gruesome murder. But before she can investigate in her own small town, she is forced to spend the summer with her Uncle Clayton, the owner of Grand Hallow--a massive funeral and mortuary operation the size of a small city. Her move to Grand Hallow only deepens the mystery as she begins to suspect the strange and chilling occurrences there are linked to her father's death. With the help of her acid-tongued best friend and deadbeat brother, Lisa must unravel the secrets of Grand Hallow--before it's too late.'

I have to admit, I was initially drawn to this book by its cover. I liked hoe simple, yet pretty the design was, and how it seemed to be two pieces cut together. Plus, it used the word antemortem in the title; a word that's kind of pretty yet rarely used. It seems to be a word that's so often forgotten that my computer's spell checker is telling me it's not real.

Sadly, the cover and the title seemed to be the best thing about this book. Now I'm not saying it's a bad book, not at all. But it wasn't the book that I was expecting it to be. This is probably my fault, and I shouldn't place blame on anyone else for this, but I came away from the book at the end feeling a little flat.

It begins well enough, with the initial mystery of the murder of Lisa's father at his gas station. The scene in which Lisa finds him is quite creepy, and it's interesting how Stephen Stromp chooses to have her go somewhat numb in her reaction, rather than to become hysterical or upset as a lot of writers would. After a while, though, this numbness seems to translate into coldness. Lisa becomes obsessed with tracking down her father's killer and getting to the bottom of things that it wasn't until I reached the very end of the book that I realised that I don't remember Lisa crying about events even once.

I understand the desire to want a strong protagonist, one that wants to tackle the mystery presented here rather than to wallow in grief, but after a while it ends up with Lisa feeling a little emotionless. This is genuinely quite sad, as Lisa seemed to be a pretty good lead character otherwise. She has some good ideas for how to get to the bottom of things, and seems to have a level of maturity that most teenage girls wouldn't have.

After the initial chapters where Lisa loses her father and makes the decision to track down the killer herself, she gets shipped off to live with her uncle Clayton for the next few months until she reaches 18, at which point she will be an adult and can do what she wants. Lisa is sent to stay at Grand Hallow, a huge funeral home, with hundreds of acres of graveyard, and it's own mortuary and crematorium facilities. She essentially becomes one of only a handful of living people in a town of the dead.

Instead of this hampering her investigations it seems to lead to more mysteries, mysteries that include deranged morticians, cannibalism, and ghostly little girls.

I have to be honest, once Lisa travels to Grand Hallow things started to get a little stranger. The almost casual way that Lisa begins to interact with two creepy young girls that claim to live in the graveyard, girls that appear at her window in the middle of the night asking her to come play is a little infuriating. Did Lisa never watch a horror film? I honestly can't think of many people who'd causally go off into the graveyard at night to play with the children, but seem to just shrug away the fact that they turn out to be ghost. Or at least that's what she's led to think.

About half way through the book the story seems to get something of a resolution. The person who killed Lisa's father is found, and she gets to leave Grand Hallow. It's not until you realise there's still about half the book left, that there's been no explanation about the dead girls, and no reason given why Lisa can apparently read people's memories from drinking their blood (that happens very early in the book with almost no attention given to it), that you realise there's still a lot left to wrap up.

Unfortunately, this second half of the book seemed to go a little too crazy for me. The story shifted, a lot. New plot points and weird revelations kept being added that it felt like two very different stories got smashed together into one. Yes, there are hints at some of these things earlier on in the book, such as Lisa's blood memory abilities, but they're so quickly mentioned and glossed over then that it feels like a big shock when they become the least crazy thing happening in the final act. I'm not going to say too much about what happens towards the end so as not to spoil too much, but it'll be stuff that you're not expecting.

In The Graveyard Antemortem is a book that goes places you don't expect, and will definitely read better if you go into it suspending your disbelief. It's not especially realistic, people act weirdly and things that just wouldn't happen in real life happen here in order to service the plot. If you go into the book knowing this, you could probably have a good time with it. There's mystery, there's horror, and there's twists that will take you by surprise. An odd, yet entertaining YA novel.




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Wednesday 20 May 2020

House of Lords Member Baroness Nicholson Brands Trans Children As Sexual Predators



It's no secret that the transgender community has received more and more scorn and criticism over the last few years for the simple crime of daring to exist. Whilst it has been generally accepted that it's wrong to target minorities, and steps to make racism, sexism, and homophobia a thing of the past have been slow but steady, one community that remains a constant target is trans people.

Think pieces about how awful trans people are, how they're all secretly sexual predators, or that they're somehow coming to turn your children trans are an almost daily occurrence. Celebrities such as Graham Linehan and J.K. Rowling share anti-transgender rhetoric on their social media platforms. And organisations such as The LGB Alliance petition government to remove rights and protections from the trans community.

One of the latest people to wade into this argument of who does and doesn't deserve to be treated like human beings is Conservative member of the House of Lords Baroness Emma Nicholson. Nicholson was elected as the Conservative Member of Parliament for Torridge and West Devon in 1987, and was selected to sit on the Conservative bench of the House of Lords in 2016.

Over the past few days Baroness Nicholson seems to have turned her sights on the trans community.

On 19th May the Baroness released the contents of a letter that she sent to the chairman of Marks & Spencers, where she informed them that she believed that they were in breach of the Equalities Act 2010 in their decision to allow trans people to use the changing rooms that fit their gender identity.


It's worth pointing out that this is, in fact, incorrect. Gender Identity is a protected characteristic under the Equality Act, and that it goes against this legislation to try to ban trans people from accessing the correct spaces. This is why groups like the LGB Alliance and other anti-trans campaigners are trying to have legislation change, as there is currently no legal way to exclude trans people from these spaces.

Despite claiming to understand the legislation Baroness Nicholson Tweeted out these false facts, and continued to stick to her position when members of the public pointed out that she was incorrect. She has responded to any criticism on her stance as a threat to women and children, claiming it to be companies chasing money over people's safety, or militant trans activists lying.


Since this initial tweet the Baroness' timeline on Twitter has devolved into a slew of transphobic comments and statements, as well as her retweeting comments from a number of anti-trans activist. Her tweets have claimed that trans rights have never existed and are simply stolen from women, claimed that she is performing a public service, said that places allowing access to trans people have been misbriefed, and even tried to claim that trans people are upsetting to the rest of the LGBTQ+ community.

One of the worst things she has done, however, is to have branded a trans child, and by extension all trans children, and I assume in her eyes trans adults, of being a sexual predator.

When the parent of a trans child tweeted that she was having to have 'a lot of grown up conversations' with her daughter regarding the open hostility towards trans people by political figures such as Barnoess Nicholson and Liz Truss, she received a response from the Baroness.

The Baroness replied with, 'Not up to me of course but the main point for me is the easy shift from male, so obviously would-be assailant to lady right up beside you shows that all is not what it might seem. Granny as the Wolf story?' Baroness Nicholson publicly called a child a sexual predator.


When Emma asked the Baroness if she really meant that, she responded with 'sadly yes'.


This blatant, open attack against trans people, and trans children in particular is sadly only the latest in a long, long line of abuse that the trans community has to face on a daily basis. Transphobic activists such as Baroness Nicholson keep falling back on the claim that trans people are a danger to women and children, that we're somehow sexual predators just waiting to attack and rape people.

Facts such as trans people being massively more likely to be the victims of sexual assault and violence than perpetrators of it seems to fall on deaf ears. These people seem to feel that if even a single trans person is ever found to be a sexual predator the whole community must be treated as such.

In my time as an openly trans person I've received abuse. I've been fired from my job for daring to transition whilst working. I've been mocked openly on the street. I've been threatened with rape and physical assault. I've been spat on. But I'm still relatively lucky. I know trans people who have been assaulted, who've been beaten and put in hospital. I know trans people who've been raped. I know trans people who can't find a job because people refuse to employ a trans person. I know trans people who have been pushed away by friends and family, who have lost their homes. I'm one of the lucky ones, but when most people hear about the abuse I've had they find it appalling; but I've seen so much worse.

I don't care is you find the idea of trans people existing to be 'weird', or if you don't understand it. At the end of the day, we're just people. We just want to live our lives and be treated fairly. We're not coming to rape and abuse anyone. We're not trying to take anything away from women. We're not going to turn your children. We just want to live.

I'm sick and tired of seeing constant attacks against the trans community in print. I hate that people I've never met claim I'm a paedophile rapist. I hate that the few rights I have as a trans person are currently up in the air and might be taken away from me when Liz Truss reveals the changes the government is making to the Gender Recognition Act. Most of all I'm just sick and tired of being treated like a monster for just being who I was born.

I can't imagine how hard it is for some other members of the trans community, and my heart bleeds for the children that are being publicly branded sexual predators by members of government for no reason. 

Like I said, I'm lucky. But a lot of trans people aren't. These kind of attacks cost our community. They cost lives. And they have to stop.

I would encourage anyone who wishes to to complain to the House of Lords in writing so that this matter can be looked into, and any appropriate measures can be taken against Baroness Nicholson. Complain Here.


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Space Precinct Episode 01 'Protect and Survive' - TV Review



Space Precinct, for those not in the know, was a British science fiction police procedural television series produced from 1994 to 1995, and was created by Gerry Anderson. Anderson was responsible for a number of sucessful television series, including Thunderbirds, Space: 1999, and Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons. The series followed a human police officer, Patrick Brogan, who has transferred from New York City to Demeter City, a police precinct on the distant planet of Altor.

The first episode drops viewers straight into the action, as Brogan and his partner, Jack Haldane, are on a stakeout, waiting for an alien they suspect is smuggling illegal Xyronite immigrants. When the smuggler is killed in the ensuing encounter, Brogan ends up having to rely on his informant, Slick Ostrasky, to help find the man in charge. However, when Slick is killed Brogan and Haldane get put on protection detail so that the only witness to the killing, a Melazoid businessman called Armand Loyster, can identify the murderer.

I can vaguely remember the Space Precinct series when it first aired in the UK in the mid 90's, and had a few of the action figures. However, my recollections of the series are only really vague memories, and as such I wasn't sure what to really expect sitting down to watch the show again. Whilst there were times that the episode felt a little cheesey, with some effects and sets that looked thrown together, and there was a little humour thrown in too, I was shocked at how grim and gritty it was at times too.


The episode opens with a stakeout that goes wrong, leading to Brogan getting into a gunfight with an alien inside a slaughterhouse. Gutted alien carcasses hang from the ceiling, and the almost demonic looking alien that he's chasing tries to kill him. Brogan ends up having to shoot the alien in order to protect himself, and just murders the guy.

This darker tone ended up carrying across much of the episode. When Slick Ostrasky, played by Pink Panther's Burt Kwouk, is killed he's tied into a car that is made to crash, resulting in a massive explosion; all whilst he's begging the murderer to let him go.

The episode seemed to be made the same way any adult police procedural show would be, albeit with a futuristic layer pasted on top. Instead of regular beat cops you've got exotic aliens. Instead of car chases people are in flying cars. But at its heart this is a story about an evil man that will murder to get away with his crimes, and police officers who want to bring him to justice.

I remember the show being on television in the early evening, almost as if it were designed for a family audience in the way that Star Trek was. I even think the BBC showed it around the same time as Star Trek. But after watching it now, with fresh eyes, I'm not so sure if it was designed for a family audience. If you took out the fantastical and it was a modern, real world setting this would not be a show that you'd want your kids to seem. A number of people die quite brutally, one of whom gets shot in front of a video monitor so that Brogans kids see it.


Space Precinct has genuinely surprised me by the tone of the content. I was expecting something a bit lighter, and more adventure focused like Anderson's other works. Instead there's a show that whilst not the most visually impressive things around has some very adult and engaging content at its core. The story in this episode would work just as well in a modern day setting, and I think that's why the episode held up so well. I'm excited to see if the rest of the series continues like this, or if it leans more into the science fiction side of things. If it does, I think it may lead to some weaker moments, as the police procedural aspect worked so well.

Whilst some of the effects, such as laser beams and an alien's frog-like tongue looked very dated the model work on display was absolutely brilliant. By this point Anderson had been producing shows made using models for decades, and that experience shows. The flying car chases look great, and the model ships break through terrain in spectacular fashion. The explosion that kills Slick is on screen for only a few seconds, but you can see where they spent a lot of time, effort, and money building the models before the blow them to pieces.

'Protect and Survive' is an interesting first step into the Space Precinct universe. It seems to not quite know what kind of tone it wants to have, but it certainly manages to impress.




Tuesday 19 May 2020

Hagazussa: A Heathen's Curse - Film Review and Analysis



This article is the expanded version of my review that appeared on Set The Tape



Hagazussa: A Heathen's Curse was the directorial debut of Lucas Feigelfield, who also wrote the film. Initially released in 2018 in Germany, it's now receiving a wider home release.

Hagazussa follows the life of Albrun, a girl living in a remote cabin with her mother. The two of them are outcasts from the local community, and shunned as witches. When Albrun's mother gets sick she eventually passes away, leaving the child alone to fend for herself. The film then jumps forward to Albrun as a young woman, with a baby of her own. Still living in her mothers remote cabin, she begins to experience increasingly strange and disturbing events.

In all honesty, I don't really know how to start talking about Hagazussa. I'd heard a little about the film before I had the chance to see it, and one of those things was that a lot of people felt it was similar in many regards to The Witch by Robert Egger. I can see why this parallel is made; both films centre on people in very isolated, wooded locations in times past who are struggling with supposed supernatural forces. Both films are slow burns that rely as much on lingering camera shots and the sounds to build tension as anything else in the story. They're also both open to interpretation as to what actually happens, whether events are influenced by the paranormal, or if they're stories of young women abused to breaking point.

Whilst I enjoyed The Witch and found it to be an interesting film, it didn't engage me or disturb me in the same way that Hagazussa did. I say engage, but that's not really accurate. I found it a little hard to stay with the film at times. The story is very slow, and one could argue that a good portion of the movie could be cut down and tightened to give it a better pace, but then I think it would lose a lot of what makes it a creepy experience. The fact that I had to work to stay in the movie, that I had to make myself stay invested did, in retrospect, add something to the experience.


Hagazussa is a story that you don't want to experience. It's designed to be off putting and disturbing. You want to turn it off and leave it alone because it gets under your skin. And whilst you have the power to do that, you can just stop, Albrun can't run away from what's happening to her. She's stuck in these experiences, and you feel like you have to stay there with her. The film made me want to run away from it, yet I also wanted to see what would happen to its lead next, a kind of morbid curiosity. I'm not even sure if this could be down to feeling sorry for the character and wanting to see it through to the end to see if things went well for her, because the film never gave the sense that there would be a happy ending.

The very first scenes in the film show Albrun's childhood, her isolated upbringing with her mother. These scenes are probably the most easily understood and interpreted part of the film, as events seem to play out how they appear. We learn through these scenes that the two women are pretty much hated by others in the local community, and we see the impact this has on Albrun. After her mother's death things become worse for Albrun, and could be considered one of the leading events in her awful adulthood.

When we next see Albrun as an adult she's still at her mothers cabin, having carried on alone from her childhood. She doesn't interact well with the people in town, and is openly mocked and ridiculed by the local children. You begin to get a sense that Albrun has never really learned to talk to people, and that she's as sheltered and naive as when she herself was a child. You begin to question how she has a child because of this, how she could have had a romantic relationship if she's so hated by those around her and appears incapable of even talking to people. A possible explanation for this is given by one of the local women, who makes a comment about heathens who attack lone women in the mountains, raping them and making them pregnant. A possible rape would add to Albrun's difficulties with people, and explain why she refuses to answer questions about her child's father.

Over the course of the film we see Albrun try to make strives towards making an actual friendship with one of the local women, Swinda, but this attempt ends in a brutal scene where Swinda holds Albrun down to be raped by one of the local men. Following this moment Albrun finds that her goats have all been stolen, save one who's left as a slaughtered warning. Enraged by these events Albrun takes revenge on the town by throwing a dead rat in their water supply, and peeing in it; which results in a disease sweeping through them.

After seeing that she's caused the deaths of innocents, Albrun goes deep into the woods and eats a mushroom that sends her on a hallucinogenic trip that results in her drowning her baby. When she comes out of her trip she sees what she has done puts her baby's body into her cooking pot, where she stews and eventually eats it.

This is without a doubt one of the most disturbing and affecting moments of the film. The events themselves are enough to make you feel uncomfortable, but the long lingering takes on Albrun as she's overwhelmed by her actions are awful enough, but the shots of what she does afterwards are even worse. It could have been shot in a way that implied what she did, or even begin to show the audience before cutting away, but instead the camera lingers as she brings the meat to her mouth and begins to eat her own daughter. Following this, she leaves her home and waits for the dawn on top the mountain, where the sunlight causes her to burst into flames.

The reason that I've gone into the story so deeply here, that I've spoken openly about spoilers, is because you need to know what happens in order for me to talk about how open to interpretation the events are.

Taken literally, Albrun poisoned the town with her waste and a dead rat, causing disease, before she went on a trip and accidentally killed her baby. Then she tries to dispose of the evidence by eating her. This makes some kind of sense, and is probably what some people would take from the film, but fails to explain the final scenes of her bursting into flames.


Another possibility is that Albrun actually used magic to curse the town. This comes more into play thanks to what happens afterwards, as the consumption of hallucinogenic mushrooms and eating of babies are heavily connected to witchcraft lore. Mushrooms such as the redcap Fly Agaric appear in many old drawings and pictures of witches, and some believed their hallucinogenic properties were used to create experiences such as flying, or changing into other creatures. The presence of some hallucinogens are also used to explain why some areas broke out into witch hysteria, such as the possibility of ergot being baked into bread being behind the Salem witch trials. The eating of babies was also said to be one of their practices, and baby fat was said to be used in potions and ointments.

By eating the mushrooms and the cooking and devouring of her own baby Albrun is giving in to her witch heritage, performing the practices that her mother taught her as a child. This could explain why she bursts into flames at the end. Perhaps it's because she is now a witch and the suns light physically harms her, or it could be symbolic of her own self and her old life burning away as she embraces who she really is and becomes a witch.

There's also a possibility that Albrun is being haunted by the spirit of her mother, who she keeps hearing during the course of the film, before finally seeing in the climactic moments. If her mother was a witch, or even if not and the supernatural exists within this world there's a possibility that this spirit has been with her for her years alone on the mountain, slowly poisoning her daughters mind and twisting her into something else. Albrun's mother was left to die by the village, after years of being tormented by them, so why not use her daughter to get revenge against them from beyond the grave.

Another, and very real interpretation, and one that immediately jumped out at me, was that Albrun was just a women broken by years of loneliness and abuse, that all of the awful things she's done have slowly worn her down and led to the awful events that she experiences. She had to grow up isolated with her mother, who the locals scorned and hated. She was sexually assaulted by her sick mother, who then died and left her to grow up alone. She is raped at least once as we see in the film, but could have been raped before this. She is betrayed by the one friend she thinks she has. She causes the deaths of innocent people in a moment of rage. Her livelihood is stolen away from her. She accidentally kills her own child. All of this would be more than enough to cause a psychological break within the poor woman, and her burning on the mountain top could easily represent the destruction of her sanity.

I've also seen the possibility floated online that her baby may already be dead before the scene where Albrun appears to drown her, and that her discovering the body is really her coming to the realisation that her daughter was already long dead. This does fit too, as there are a few times where scenes make a different kind of sense see through this lens, such as her daughter refusing to drink from her breast. It could also explain why Albrun seems to leave her daughter alone for long stretches, and why she doesn't let anyone see her. Her child even seems smaller and more decomposed than she should when Albrun discovers her body, hinting that she's been dead for a long time.

I honestly don't know which of these ideas I like the most, or even which one fits with the film I saw. I don't know if there were dark forces at work. I don't know if Albrun was a witch, or just a woman with a broken mind. I'm not even sure if everything that I saw was real or figments of her mind. I find myself questioning so much of the film beyond just the ending. Part of me wants to go back and watch it again, to try and see if I can make a decision or find more hints that could help me reach a conclusion, but I also feel like I don't ever want to watch the film again.


The events depicted in Hagasuzza are disturbing and unsettling. The director uses shots and music that adds to those feelings and compounds them. The result is one of the most unsettling pieces of film I think I've ever seen.

I don't think I could watch the film again, and I'm not even sure if I could recommend it to others; and if I did it would only be because I know this is the kind of film that they would like. It's not for everyone, and probably not even for every horror fan, but it is a film worth seeing if you can stand it.

I was originally thinking this would be a film I'd probably give a three out of five. It was good, but I struggled with it, and wasn't sure how to take it. But then I started to think about the film more, and realised that just in talking about those feelings and thoughts I'd written more than two thousand words on it. Surely that means the film has had an impact on me. It might not have been an experience that I loved, or one that I'll ever want to have again, but it's one that's had an effect. And isn't that the real goal of horror, to get under your skin, to make you feel awful? If so, then Hagazussa has more than done what it's set out to do, and is a film I'm sure I'll think about for a long while to come.




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Monday 18 May 2020

Associates of Sherlock Holmes - Book Review



'A brand new Sherlock Holmes anthology to sit alongside George Mann's successful Encounters of Sherlock Holmes anthologies, and Titan's Further Adventures and New Adventures series.

'A brand-new collection of Sherlock Holmes stories from a variety of exciting voices in modern horror and steampunk, edited by respected anthologist George Mann. Stories are told from the point of view of famous associates of the great detective, including Lestrade, Mrs Hudson, Sherlock himself, Irene Adler, Langdale Pike, and of course, Professor Moriarty...'

Associates of Sherlock Holmes is a book designed for fans of Sherlock Holmes fiction. I now that that could be said about any new Sherlock Holmes book, but this book really appeals to those who've read the original works, with each of the stories being presented here being about, or told by, characters who have appeared in the stories before. Some of these are better known characters such as Inspector Lestrade or Mycroft Holmes, but they also include those smaller one-off characters like Violet Hunter. Thankfully, each of the stories comes with a small introduction from the individual authors, so that readers get a little understanding about the character being featured, and why they've been picked.

George Mann brings together a number of well known Sherlock Holmes writers together to tell a variety of stories, some that vary quite a bit in tone and genre. There are stories that feel like they'd fit easily into the original works, whilst others take on a much darker, even horror feel.

'Heavy Game of the Pacific Northwest' by Tim Pratt tells one of the more unusual stories in the collection, following Professor Moriarty's right hand man, Colonel Sebastian Moran, all the way to the United States. Set after the death of Moriarty, and before the return of Holmes, Moran has travelled to the Pacific Northwest at the invitation of a friend in order to hunt. An avid hunter, and a man known for going after big game, Moran is somewhat surprised to learn that his firend has summoned him to help track down and kill a mysterious ape-man said to inhabit the forests of Washington State.

The story certainly plays with your expectations, giving the reader an explanation for the mysterious ape-man; before pulling the rug out and leaving a lingering question of whether or not Moran does in fact encounter a Bigfoot. The story plays out well, slowly teasing the reader in as Moran enters the dense woodland, and has a very creepy air as he spends his time in the forests as both the hunter and the hunted.

'A Dormitory Haunting' by Jaine Fenn is a story that catches up with Violet Hunter, one of the main characters from the Conan Doyle story The Adventure of the Copper Beeches. Having only recently watched the Jeremy Brett adaptation of this particular story days before reading this book it was a pleasant surprise to see Violet return. Despite being something of a pawn in that story, being used by a vile man in his plots, she was a very clever young woman. She had the knowledge to seek out Sherlock's help even before realising how bad things were, and was quite active in that initial story at finding the truth.

Here we see her as the head of a private school in Walsall, something that Holmes mentions in the original story. We see a slightly older and more confident Violet, one who when confronted with a mystery makes a decision to get to the bottom of it and protect the girls under her care. We get to see how her experiences in the original story have shaped her, and made her a great amateur detective in her own rights.

Cavan Scott's 'Nor Hell A Fury' features one of the most memorable and prominent female characters from the world of Holmes, Irene Adler. Often celebrated as a woman who was able to best Sherlock Holmes, and earning his respect in doing so, we get to see what happened next for her in this story set in France.

One of the most interesting things that Scott does here, however, is allude to the idea that Watson has had to alter some of his stories for publication so as not to embarrass certain public figures. In this case, it appears that Irene Adler is not even her real name, and was a name that Watson gave her in the story, and that it was not the King of Bohemia who was involved in that particular scandal but a member of the Russian royals. It makes complete sense that Watson would need to alter certain facts and events in order for them to be published, but it's an idea that doesn't often come up in Holmes stories. It was also enjoyable to see that whilst Irene didn't win like she wanted here, she was still smart enough to end up with an insurance measure at the end, proving that even if she doesn't win she's smart enough not to lose.

'The Vanishing Snake' by Jefferey Thomas tackles one of the better known Sherlock Holmes stories, The Speckled Band, and takes the opportunity to correct a few things that were factually incorrect with the original story. Thomas points out that there's no such snake as a Swamp Adder, and that snakes don't drink milk, but instead of using these inconsistencies to damage the original story, uses them to take it in a new and interesting direction. The explanation for these mistakes skirts on the supernatural, yet works incredibly well, and offers readers an unusual alternative theory.

My favourite story in the collection, however, would have to be 'peeler' by Nick Kyme. The story centres on Holmes' best known ally, other than Watson of course, Inspector Lestrade. In this story Lestrade begins to investigate a number of attacks across London, where the victims are left killed and large portions of their skin removed.

The story has a very Jack The Ripper feel to it, and cashes in on the creepy horror of Victorian era London well. The plot advances at a pace quick enough to remain exciting throughout, yet also gives you time to slow down and see how the police investigate the kind of crimes that Sherlock and Watson ultimately get called in on. It's great to see how Lestrade teams up with the consulting detective from the opposite side, and how he feels about Holmes. The story is so well done that it's one that I could easily see expanded upon into a much bigger story, one that could easily be a book in itself.

These are just some of the stories on offer in the book, however, and there are a lot of others too. There are stories that feature Billy the Page, Shinwell Jones, Mycroft Holmes, Inspector Barnes, and many others. Each of the writers manages to take these small characters, some even having a single appearance in the original work, and manages to craft engaging and engrossing tales. The stories highlight how interesting and diverse the supporting cast were in Conan Doyle's original stories, and shows how great writers like those on offer here can take these characters and make them leads in their own tales.

Whether you're a fan who knows all of the original stories and can name all the side characters, or someone with only a passing knowledge of the Sherlock Holmes cannon, this book is sure to offer you something. Even if for some reason you don't enjoy every story (which I would be hard pressed to believe as they're all amazing) there will definitely be something here that will entertain.




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Wednesday 13 May 2020

A Nightmare On Elm Street (2010) – 10 Years On



Originally published on Set The Tape

Horror films, and more specifically their villains, have the ability to become some of the most iconic things in not just film but pop culture in general. Even if they’ve never seen the films, most people would be able to identify Jason Vorhees or Leatherface because of their distinctive looks.

Even where there are different killers in each film, like Ghostface from the Scream movies, people know it’s the scream killer. The beauty of these iconic masks is that not only are they instantly recognisable, but that anyone can play that role, and quite often several actors and stunt performers will play these bad guys over the course of a franchise. The biggest exception to this for horror films has to be Freddy Krueger.

Freddy is as iconic as his mask-wearing brethren, with his green and red striped jumper, hat, razor glove, and burnt face. But it’s not just his clothing and appearance that makes him stand out, but the performance of Robert Englund. Englund played Krueger a staggering eight times across different films, and it’s the energy, mannerisms, and voice of Englund that helped to make Freddy an icon that came back time and time again.

Getting over this, and recapturing that magic, would prove to be the biggest hurdle for the 2010 remake of A Nightmare On Elm Street. The decision to remake the film came about in part thanks to the success of the Friday the 13th remake the year before, a film that was a critical and commercial success. Platinum Dunes, the production company that owned both franchises, thought that they could bring the same level of success to A Nightmare On Elm Street.


The new film looked good, with great cinematography from Jeff Cutter, the script was true to the spirit of the original yet managed to do enough of its own thing thanks to good writing from Wesley Strick and Eric Heisserer, and director Samuel Bayer executed a slick and entertaining film. Despite this, the remake is never given the amount of respect and love by Elm Street fans as the original film. Unfortunately, this is down to the performance of Jackie Earle Haley as Freddy.

Fresh off the success of playing Rorschach in the 2009 Watchmen adaptation, Haley was something of a hot commodity, with filmmakers wanting to get him into one of their projects as soon as possible. And that’s a fair thing: he’s a very good actor, and his performance as a deranged and unstable lunatic was probably the best thing from Watchmen,was so why not get him to play another deranged lunatic? It should have worked.

What seems to have happened, however, was that for whatever reason Haley was still playing Rorschach. His Freddy was slow, he hid in the shadows, and he grumble mumbled his way through most of his dialogue. Whilst not inherently bad creative decisions when you compare them to Englund, which moviegoers were always going to do, it comes across as a flat and dull version of the character. The energy and fun that Freddy adopted over the course of the franchise was gone. Instead we had a gloomy and nasty killer who didn’t actually seem to be having much fun in what he was doing.

Freddy was always a killer that loved killing. He revelled in not just the kill, but the hunt too. He liked that he was able to mess with his victims in their dreams, and would often perform elaborate torture and means of death in large part because he found it funny. Many of the films in the franchise could probably be classed as somewhat comedic at times because of this. Taking out these moments of dark comedy might sound like the right decision – after all, you’re making a horror. But it turns out that doing so leaves a film that feels like a pale imitation of the original, one that fails to please fans, and is often forgotten.


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Monday 11 May 2020

Trans Woman Helle Jae O'Regan Killed



Transgender woman Helle Jae O'Regan has been identified as the victim of a workplace rampage that claimed her life and injured two others in San Antonio on 6th May.

20-year-old Helle was employed at Diesel Barbershop in San Antonio, Texas, where the incident took place.

According to police statements and media reports, 42-year-old Damion Campbell entered the barbershop to book an appointment whilst staff were preparing the premises to re-open, but when asked to provide payment he left the store, before returning with weapons. He was seen in surveillance video holding both a knife and a gun, and threatened the three members of staff present.

Two of Helle's fellow employees were able to escape, one without injuries whilst the other received several stab wounds. According to the police, Campbell choked Helle unconscious before stabbing her to death. Police have said that they do not believe Helle's gender played a role in her death.

 Helle has been described as a proud trans woman, who embraced her identity. On the Trans Day of Visibility she posted to her Instagram account where she shared pictures of her transition. 'I wasn't going to post anything but it's #transdayofvisibility so I decided I will. I was looking at the pictures I used to take before I transitioned versus now and it made me realize I'm way happier than I used to be. I love myself now. Thank you to everyone who's ever supported me and to anyone who hasn't I hope you come around. I'm happy and proud to be myself.' The post said.


Management of Diesel Barbershop chose to release a statement on their Facebook page in order to provide members of the public with more information, and to correct some reports that had provided incorrect information on the incident.

The Diesel family is devasted over the loss of life and acts of violence committed against the employees of our Bandera Oaks location on May 6th. This senseless act of violence has shaken us to our core and is affecting us all in ways we could have never imagined. Thank you all for your kind words, thoughts, and prayers as we try to comprehend what just happened and move forward through the rough days ahead.
Because of this tragic event on May 6th, the re-opening of all of the Diesel Barbershops in San Antonio and New Braunfels is being temporarily delayed until Friday May 15th.
To help dispel the false reports from the various media outlets, here are the basic facts of the events of May 6th, 2020 as best as I can relay them. Out of respect and privacy for the families and employees involved in this horrible tragedy, I have intentionally chosen to not identify the 3 of them by name.
3 Diesel Barbershop employees were at Bandera Oaks the morning of May 6th answering phones to book appointments and deep cleaning the shop for our re-opening on May 8th. An individual came to the front door (which was locked) and attempted to enter. We unlocked and opened the door to let him know we were closed and getting the shop ready to reopen on Friday. The man then asked about making an appointment for when we reopen. As we would have likely done for any of our clients, we let the man in to the shop to book his appointment. We gathered the necessary information but when it came time to secure his appointment by placing a credit card on file, he said he needed to step outside to grab a form of payment. When the man stepped back into the shop, the staff realized that along with the backpack he was now carrying, he also had a handgun and a knife. Attempts were made to give the man whatever he wanted…cash, equipment, or whatever it took to get him out of the shop. The man made it clear that he wasn’t there for money. He then began asking the employees: “What have you done wrong? What have you done wrong? God sent me here to kill you because you have done something wrong! What have you done wrong?” over and over again while forcing them to the back of the shop. Details beyond this are sketchy at best. In the end, one employee managed to escape and call 911. One employee was stabbed 5 times in the back, but she also managed to escape. Tragically, one employee lost their life in this senseless act of violence. Even as I type it, I still cannot believe it. It’s a nightmare of the most epic proportions.
From the beginning, there has been a great deal of incorrect information reported in the media. For example:
1. Chief McManus stated publicly in an interview that we were open, and the man was receiving a service. This is patently false. We were not open for business nor doing illegal haircuts. We were cleaning the shop to prepare it to open on Friday May the 8th and the front door was locked. We let the man in because he said he said wanted to book an appointment for when we reopen.
2. There was not an altercation in front of the shop. Everything occurred inside the shop. The employees who ran out of the shop ran to Pei Wei and Monarch Dental to call 911. Neither business is involved in this tragedy beyond that.
Here is what I know to be true and what I know I need to focus on to help me and my Diesel family process this senseless tragedy. A man attempted to kill 3 of my amazing employees. 3 wonderful, kindhearted, give you the shirt off of their backs, loyal employees for no reason at all. None. In fact, detectives tell us this appears to be a completely random act of violence. And because of that random act of violence, one life has been ended and a family is forever changed, two employees will be forever scarred and changed by this, and the entire Diesel Family is reeling in shock. We’re all just numb now. Numb.
Make no mistake about it. This tragedy will forever be a part of who we are, but it will not define us, what we do and how we take care of our clients. I kindly and respectfully ask that you all rally around the staff at the Bandera Oaks location and that you throw all of the love and support you can to the families of the employees who were directly involved in this horrible horrible tragedy. They need you. We need you.
Thank you for your support and love all of these years. It means more to me and to my staff than you will ever know.
We will be back and we will get through this. One. Day. At. A. Time.

Emmett Schelling, the Executive Director of the Transgender Education Network of Texas (TENT) spoke out on the incident. 'We are saddened to hear of the news about Helle O’Regan’s death. Trans and non-binary Texans, unfortunately, lays claim to being the state with the highest number of reported murders of transgender people than any other state these past five years. The stigma that exists and is continued to be perpetuated from the highest held offices in our state only feeds into this. We mourn for Helle’s life being cut so prematurely, but take comfort in hearing how much joy she brought to those who knew, loved and accepted her fully as her authentic self.'

Tori Cooper, of the Human Rights Campaign posted on the organisation's website saying, 'The Human Rights Campaign is standing with Helle’s family and friends in mourning today. Her death further underscores the dire and urgent need to end violence and discrimination against transgender people - and especially against transgender women - now.'

One of Helle's friends, Luke Tyler, spoke to local news networks about Helle, saying 'Every time I saw her, she smiled. She’d do anything for you. She was a caring person. I never saw her in a bad mood. Being trans is so hard, and her life was hard, but she lived like it was the best day of her life every day.'


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