Pop culture from Southern California and beyond.
Without A Net link roundup for Friday, Jan. 13
Jemal Countess/Getty Images
File: Actor Christopher Walken attends the opening night party for ''A Behanding In Spokane'' on Broadway at Bar Americain on March 4, 2010 in New York City.
- Christopher Walken shares what he's learned about, um, everything. (Or at least golf, spaghetti, zoos and Dennis Hopper.) (Esquire)
- After all of their lessons on campaign finance, looking forward to "All I Really Need To Know I Learned From The Colbert Report" books. (The Atlantic Wire)
- TV Execs Are Out Of Ideas Department: The CW is picking up a new musical chairs reality show called "Oh Sit!" (Best Week Ever)
- Oh boy, they're working on a pilot with my favorite character from "Smallville," Green Arrow! (Thought I would say Superman, did you? You clearly don't know me.) Hopefully this one goes farther than the Wonder Woman pilot for NBC that never aired. (Ain't It Cool)
- Muppets Statler & Waldorf on the Critics Choice Awards. (The Mary Sue)
- Weird comic book-ized versions of Monsters, Inc. and Lilo & Stitch. (io9)
- The Hulk robbed a bank. (Or at least a guy in a Hulk mask.) No luck so far in apprehending him. Pro tip: Look for Bruce Banner. (Boing Boing)
- New Grooveshark phone app lets you listen to any song you want, at any time, on the go. (Lifehacker)
- A Words With Friends game saved this man's life, thanks to playing with a doctor. See, I'm not wasting my time, I'm doing what's right for my health. (The Daily What)
- A satellite map of all the trees in the United States. (Geekosystem)
- They're making a comic book of "The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo," which I guess means an artist is drawing a lot of rape right about now. (The Beat)
- Jimmy Fallon as David Bowie combined with Tim Tebow? Yes, please. (Stereogum)
- Soooo should Microsoft be able to offer an "Avoid Crime-Ridden Areas" GPS feature? (Geekologie)
- Presented without comment: "Fewer Women Voters Know Basic Facts Than Men Voters" (The Atlantic Wire)
- And, one more weird kind of sexist thing: the classic comic book where Supergirl and Wonder Woman give up superheroing because it's too "manly." (Comic Book Resources)
Follow @WithoutABlog and lead Without A Net blogger @MikeRoe on Twitter, and tweet your own fun and quirky links you think should be included.























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