Mesmerizing Marble Runs From Procedural Generation

There are few things that can keep a certain kind of mechanically-inclined mind entranced as well as a marble run, and few structures that look as interestingly organic as procedurally-generated de…

Hackaday
Film Review: A Taxing Woman - Breaking it all Down

When it comes to the Procedural genre of film, generally these works tend to put their focus on law enforcement – cops and robbers, literally. However, the cops the generally don’t cover are ones who deel with what are considered more “boring” crimes – white collar financial crimes. Smuggling is sexy, robbers are sexy, gangsters…

Breaking it all Down

I’ve read a little Japanese detective fiction before, so when I saw this on a list of recent reads posted by someone I follow on Bluesky, I thought I’d give it a try. It was my audiobook for the drive back from France at the weekend, and for a couple of days afterwards.

A man staggers through the street, apparently drunk, and comes to rest at a statue on a bridge. It turns out he has a knife embedded in his chest. A team of detectives is put on the case, and their investigation quickly finds a lead suspect. It seems like an open and shut case, but one of the detectives is not so sure. This would be Detective Kaga, whose third outing this is. I haven’t read the previous two, but I don’t think it mattered. What follows is an enjoyable procedural, involving interviews and lots of legwork, with the lead detective always one step ahead of his partner, who is the reader’s proxy and asks all the puzzled questions. I was hoping for something a little different in terms of what I normally read, and there’s enough Japanese culture, religion, and even origami to satisfy.

So: an enjoyable read, and I’ll probably follow up by looking for more by the same author.

What I will almost certainly do, however, is avoid this particular audiobook narrator. I’m fairly satisfied that this was a real person, but if I tell you that I went to look him up to verify that, then you start to see the problem. Right from the off, I found his narration to be idiosyncratic: a little flat in places, and with an annoying habit of reading the reporting clauses in dialogue with a pause/beat long enough that the reporting clause seemed to belong to the subsequent speech act rather than the preceding one.

‘What is the problem?’

[beat]

He said, in a tone of slight annoyance.

I made that example up, but you get the idea. So that was one of the things that made me suspect I’d accidentally bought a book narrated by an AI. Needless to say, I have no intention of ever doing that. But there was enough modulation and characterisation elsewhere that I thought it probably was a real person.

But the other thing that kind of screamed AI was a repeated glitch in the pronunciation of certain words. Here is a list:

  • Confirmation
  • Situation
  • Station
  • Destination 
  • Information 
  • Imagination 
  • Conversation 

You get the picture. With every single word with that ending, the narrator seemed to glitch, leaning too heavily on the ‘a’ sound in each word so that it almost added an extra syllable. It’s hard to describe, but it is irritating, and wierd, to the point that I am still half-suspicious that I was listening to an AI voice trained on this real actor’s voice.

As I said, I enjoyed the book itself, but those two irritating glitches/habits kept throwing me out of it, so I’ll be avoiding ‘P J Ochlan’ in the future.

https://robmcminn.uk/2024/11/06/a-death-in-tokyo-by-keigo-higashino-audiobook/

#Audiobook #audiobooks #bookReviews #Books #Crime #detective #fiction #procedurals #Reading

“A Foundational Building Block”: The Procedural Is Back & Streamers Are Aboard – MIPCOM Scenesetters

Big hits including 'NCIS' & 'Grey's Anatomy' are being given fresh leases of life as the SVoDs join the procedural party.

Deadline
Watching #police #procedurals, I think that if somebody were a #narcissistic #nutjob it would be much more interesting to try and see just how much evidence you could leave and still not get caught/prosecuted than it would be trying to plan a #Perfect #Crime - Although now I say that; it does sound like what #Trump has been doing this last 50 years.

Smooth Criminal?

In Ask Metafilter, Not A Thing is looking for skilful criminals criming skilfully: "Donald Westlake / Parker fans, what have you found that scratches a similar itch? I'm looking for something where a criminal is at the center of the story: no cops, wannabe cops or vigilantes. Like a police procedural, but for the other side."

https://ask.metafilter.com/370154/Skilful-criminals-criming-skilfully

#books #authors #reading #fiction #CrimeFiction #novels #crime #criminals #DonaldWestlake #procedurals #SmoothCriminals #SuccessfulCriminals

Skilful criminals criming skilfully

Donald Westlake/Parker fans, what have you found that scratches a similar itch? I'm looking for something where a criminal is at the center of the story: no cops, wannabe cops or vigilantes. Like...

ID: Invaded – Anime Review

If I
was going to describe ID: Invaded
to someone in an elevator, it would be Inception
crossed with Criminal Minds.
It’s probably the closest I’ve come to a more standard procedural
in a genre anime for quite some time, in a very imaginative way.

The show follows a special branch of the Japanese police department a

https://countzeroor.com/2020/04/08/id-invaded-anime-review/

#Anime #2020sinanime #Anime #Mysteryfiction #procedurals #sciencefiction

ID: Invaded – Anime Review - Breaking it all Down

If I was going to describe ID: Invaded to someone in an elevator, it would be Inception crossed with Criminal Minds. It’s probably the closest I’ve come to a more standard procedural in a genre anime for quite some time, in a very imaginative way. The show follows a special branch of the Japanese police

Breaking it all Down