March 17

$4.20 includes wrapping and mailing!

A Postcard advertising The Congressional Club Cookbook.
"Fourteen editions of these cookbooks have been sporadically published throughout the years by The Congressional Club, a non-profit organization chartered by Congress in 1908." In 1927, The first cookbook was published advising, "“Knead and beat 500 licks till dough is soft and blisters,” instructed Willa Eslick, future Member and wife of then-Representative Edward Eslick, in her recipe for “Beaten Biscuits.” [more inside]
posted by clavdivs at 5:40 PM - 0 comments

Forever No More

Forever 21 has filed for bankruptcy a second and presumably final time, announcing plans to "wind down" its retail stores. It blames Chinese fast-fashion rivals Shein and Temu for exploiting the de minimis exemption to undercut its prices. (previously) [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 5:31 PM - 1 comment

The Last of The Few

The last surviving Battle of Britain pilot, John 'Paddy' Hemingway, has died aged 105. [more inside]
posted by Major Clanger at 4:19 PM - 8 comments

Dress for this mess

Clearly, a better-dressed Congress — if not a more functional one — is possible. And a handful of current members are proving it. So I wanted to highlight a few of the most fashionable people in what is perhaps America’s least fashionable institution. Many of Congress’ best dressed people are women, but since I’m a menswear writer, I decided to focus on the men. With that in mind, here are the five most stylish guys in Congress. from Congress Is Falling Apart — But These 5 Guys Look Good Doing It by Derek Guy [Politico]
posted by chavenet at 12:46 PM - 24 comments

Of Dandelions and Palestine

Why Chinese netizens call Palestinian fighters "dandelions". "Palestine today is China's yesterday". Why young Chinese are rediscovering Mao's support for Palestine. [more inside]
posted by toastyk at 7:31 AM - 44 comments

Coyote V. Tesla

Former NASA engineer, squirrel competition organizer, and porch pirate antagonist Mark Rober demonstrates the inadequacy of Tesla's driving automation by means of a test that is quite literally Looney Tunes. [more inside]
posted by NoxAeternum at 7:25 AM - 61 comments

Female Scribes in the Middle Ages

"[N]o attempt has been made up till now to quantify women’s contribution to [medieval] manuscript production. Here we address the research question: What was the quantitative contribution of female scribes based on available sources?" The answer may surprise you! [more inside]
posted by jedicus at 6:47 AM - 12 comments

Columbia University Revokes Degrees of Pro-Palestinian Protesters

Reported by Newsweek: Columbia University announced on Thursday that it expelled or suspended some of the students who occupied a campus building last year in protest of Israel's war on Hamas in the Gaza Strip. [more inside]
posted by AlSweigart at 6:42 AM - 56 comments

They're Suing the Government for the Right to Die

The ethics are muddy, the country is divided, and the world is watching Canada's next move. (TW/CW: suicide, self-harm, mental health issues, suicidal ideation) [more inside]
posted by Kitteh at 6:38 AM - 13 comments

Andrea Dworkin’s “Right-Wing Women”

Right-Wing Women reappears in a moment of pitched anti-feminist backlash, as corporate America abandons all pretense of equal treatment and abusers of women fill the government. Women marched, rallied, and told their stories, but no hashtag is a match for misogyny. “No matter how often these stories are told, with whatever clarity or elegance, bitterness or sorrow, they might as well have been whispered in the wind or written in sand; they disappear, as if they are nothing,” Dworkin wrote. Male outrage drowned out female pain. As she put it, “The tellers and stories are ignored or ridiculed; threatened back into silence or destroyed, and the experience of female suffering is buried in cultural invisibility and contempt.” - Sarah Jones
posted by Lemkin at 6:24 AM - 16 comments

New $5 banknote to celebrate First Nations ties to Country

The Reserve Bank of Australia says the $5 note's new theme, selected from more than 2100 public submissions, will honour the emotional, spiritual, and physical connection of First Nations people to Country. Country does not mean a country like eg New Zealand, or the United Kingdom - each First Nations group in Australia has a geographical area within Australia that is very culturally and spiritually important to them that is referred to as Country. Country is the traditional lands of First Nations Australian peoples. First link. Second link. [more inside]
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 4:42 AM - 3 comments

Will the tooth fairy pay up if the tooth has been swallowed?

"Other parents we know have settled on an introductory offer of £1 to £2 for Tooth 1, lowering to a lesser rate for subsequent donations, and we’re about to put this to him when he hits upon a snag. ‘How do I get the money without the tooth?’ he asks, suddenly lamenting his dentivore breakfast. ‘Er, you fill out a form’ I splutter vaguely, since it’s the only thing I can think to say, and he’s already late for school. This is how I end up spending the rest of my morning drafting Form TF230 from the Department of Teeth." [more inside]
posted by rory at 1:53 AM - 28 comments

We’re here and here to look

In an age saturated with images, the faculties of perception are coarsened and weakened, like silk put through the dryer. Refining and strengthening one’s sight, a rewarding enterprise whenever, is only more rewarding now. from Do You Want to See? by Alice Gribbin [Cluny Journal]
posted by chavenet at 1:30 AM - 6 comments

March 16

"We're just listening for his call"

Andy Kaufman's: 'Mighty Mouse'. "This performance raises a host of questions concerning performance and identity. What exactly are we seeing? Is it Andy Kaufman simply being (or presenting) himself executing an action?"
'Missed Connections: Performance, Art, and Popular Culture' [more inside]
posted by clavdivs at 8:09 PM - 10 comments

Tired of barramundi and cod? A new white fish species is on the way

Tired of barramundi and cod? A new white fish species is on the way. The CSIRO [Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, a scientific research organisation funded by the Australian Federal Government] unveils new fish variety that could one day make a splash on dinner tables across Australia. They are working on developing a sustainable, profitable and eco-friendly farmed fish using an Australian native white fish few have heard of.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 3:57 PM - 19 comments

Half humble servants of the state, half scheming tyrants

Lorenzo’s descendants finally built Earth’s largest, most famous disability access ramp. It’s name is the Vasari Corridor, the elevated walkway I discussed last week as conquering Duke Cosimo I’s project of architectural domination, the tyrant’s assassin-proof walkway piercing the city’s heart. Diversity celebration or tyrant’s monument? It’s the same piece of architecture but feels completely different depending on what question we ask about it: Why was it built? For power? For chronic pain? Yes. Both. from History’s Largest & Most Famous Disability Access Ramp [Ex Urbe]
posted by chavenet at 2:23 PM - 8 comments

A visit with a family in mourning

His daughter was America's first measles death in a decade An outbreak—even one this big—should not have come as a surprise. Vaccination rates have dipped in many states, including Texas, since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. In Gaines County, where Seminole is located, the measles-vaccination rate among kindergartners is just 82 percent, well short of the estimated 95 percent threshold for maintaining herd immunity. Even that alarming figure would appear to undersell the local problem. Many children from the county’s Mennonite community, which numbers in the thousands, are unvaccinated, but they won’t get picked up in state tallies, because they are either homeschooled or enrolled in nonaccredited private schools, which are not required to collect such data.
posted by stillmoving at 1:50 PM - 49 comments

IF THIS IS IT

if this is all there is, I hope you live, I hope you live
posted by Sebmojo at 1:40 PM - 12 comments

Some people liked physics lab ..

You might need a cuvette or that plastic scintillator or photomultiplier that you've always wanted, but someone else has already written up the lab report in English or Italian, illustrated the setup, graphed the results, and done the math. [more inside]
posted by the Real Dan at 12:34 PM - 5 comments

"Black hair looks or moves a certain way"

The tight curls of black hair are considered difficult to mimic in animation. But A.M. Darke, a black female artist, developer, and professor aims to fix that by breaking the process down into algorithms, as covered in this PDF of the research paper she co-authored, "Curly-Cue: Geometric Methods for Highly Coiled Hair", and with the Open Source Afro Hair Library, which was co-created by Darke.

Three major elements of animating black hair (phase locking, period skipping, and switchbacks) are explained verbally and visually in this fantastic and quick Instagram reel by popculturebrain
posted by Brandon Blatcher at 9:23 AM - 15 comments

Sonic Youth's "The Diamond Sea"

"The wistful nineteen-minute epic that closes out one of the band’s 90s-era highlights in Washing Machine, is pathologically treasured like few favorite songs by few favorite bands. ... Besides containing some of Thurston Moore’s most gorgeously delivered vocals, the downright elegant guitar interplay throughout is a splendid reminder of the shadow Sonic Youth that had always dwelled beneath the surface pose of snotty NYC hipster brats making feedback with screwdrivers jammed into guitar strings. As was more and more evident as the 90s and 2000s wore on, Sonic Youth grew to embody a band as beautifully melodic as they once were crushing." - Zachary Corsa [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 8:57 AM - 6 comments

The Alien Enemies Act of 1798 - present, deportations, detainments

The Alien Enemies Act of 1798 is a wartime authority that allows the president to detain or deport the natives and citizens of an enemy nation. It has been used in the most recent past to detain Japanese and Japanese Americans during World War II. It is being used in the present by Trump to deport Venezuelan nationals; most recently a federal judge has ordered a hold on the deportations and ordered planes to turn around while the case is being considered. [more inside]
posted by toastyk at 7:01 AM - 78 comments

Capacity for religious sentiment may derive from habitual use of drugs

Today, Allegro’s theory is remembered as a quintessential example of academic suicide, like a Cambridge egyptologist suddenly confessing a belief in ancient aliens. He was soon forced to resign from his position at the University of Manchester. Amid a conservative backlash to the drug-fuelled counterculture of the ‘70s, his work faded into obscurity, a laughingstock remembered only by a loyal band of fringe conspiracists. And yet, 50 years later, Allegro’s work suddenly seems oddly prescient. from Is God a Mushroom? [Long Now]
posted by chavenet at 2:59 AM - 70 comments

March 15

Just keep swimming

Dam removal on the Klamath shows immediate returns
Within 10 days of completing the final in-water work at Iron Gate Dam – an earthfill structure farthest downstream – more than 6,000 Chinook salmon were observed migrating upstream into newly accessible habitat over a two-week period
posted by Mitheral at 7:59 PM - 8 comments

The illustrations of Robert McGinnis (Robert McGinnis is alive.)

Robert McGinnis (born February 3, 1926) is an American artist and illustrator. McGinnis is known for his illustrations of more than 1,200 paperback book covers, and over 40 movie posters, including Breakfast at Tiffany's (his first film poster assignment), Barbarella, and several James Bond and Matt Helm films*. [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 6:25 PM - 9 comments

‘I thought you’d like these colors next to each other.’

Through LEGO Compositions, Katherine Duclos Grounds Chaos in Color [Colossal]
posted by chavenet at 2:31 PM - 11 comments

Stunningly crafted wee spaces

Made a tiny laundromat in the house wall. How to make a miniature beef bowl shop in the wall. DIY How to make a miniature bathroom in the wall. And many more clever miniature spaces at MOZU Studios
posted by gwint at 11:42 AM - 11 comments

“Decarbonization efforts don’t always make financial sense.”

Climate action is becoming less of a priority around the world. Single link CBC.
posted by Joan Rivers of Babylon at 10:21 AM - 27 comments

More like Artificial Stupidity, am I right?

John Gruber, writer of Daring Fireball, creator of Markdown syntax, and one of the world's preeminent Apple apologists, has lost his religion. "Tim Cook should have already held a meeting like that to address and rectify this Siri and Apple Intelligence debacle. If such a meeting hasn’t yet occurred or doesn’t happen soon, then, I fear, that’s all she wrote. The ride is over. When mediocrity, excuses, and bullshit take root, they take over. A culture of excellence, accountability, and integrity cannot abide the acceptance of any of those things, and will quickly collapse upon itself with the acceptance of all three."
posted by Lemkin at 7:22 AM - 85 comments

Books wield a dangerous power

While we might point to violent video games or sexually explicit films as potentially dangerous and corrupting influences on tender or vulnerable minds, the novel is treated as uplifting and salutary, regardless of its content: a kale smoothie for the soul. When we do talk about books being ‘dangerous’, it is usually with a knowing nod and a wink: and the implication is that those of us in the know know better. In a recent [2015] Guardian interview, the controversial British writer Melvin Burgess insists that ‘like most “dangerous” books, [Junk, his novel for young adults] is in fact a threat only to people who are themselves dangerous – people who want to control others’. Any suggestion that a book might be dangerous is, in other words, only ever a manifestation of bigotry or fear. But it was not always thus. from Dark books by Tara Isabella Burton [Aeon; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 3:19 AM - 15 comments

March 14

Weird tricks compound over time

Common Side Effects [FF] - "Marshall meets his old high school classmate Frances and lets her in on a world-changing secret." [more inside]
posted by kliuless at 11:42 PM - 10 comments

"Predict your future in love and life."

Megan Williams (Had, 3/13/2025), "M.A.S.H": "SPOUSE: ... 4. marriage is for the birds, you say, & turn into a sparrow." The game MASH, nostalgic for generations, has been on Only Murders ... (screenshot; Fanfare), Yellowjackets (screenshot; Fanfare), and A Black Lady Sketch Show (full sketch; Fanfare). GennaRose Nethercott's "The Literature of Cootie Catchers" contemplates more children's fortune games. Still more appeared in 1833 (by poet / novelist / abolitionist Lydia Maria Child), 1858 (and often later), 1867, 1898, 1900, 1909, 1925, 1927, and 1929. But in English, fortune games date to the 13th and 15th C. (mss 1; mss 2), and a translation of The Dodechedron of Fortune in 1613 points to a rich tradition in Europe (1482, 1526, 1540, 1630, 1633, 1649, 1655, and 1663), also evoked by games in A Treatise on the Sports of Wit (1675).
posted by Wobbuffet at 10:48 PM - 3 comments

Hansa across the ocean, Hansa across the sea

The rise and fall of the Hanseatic League "Today, we typically think of coalitions in the context of modern electoral politics. So it might be surprising that one of the greatest case studies in the history of coalitions is a community of medieval German merchants known as the Hansa...Without corporate structures, they built supply chains that distributed goods between Northern Europe’s major ports, with capillaries that spread into each city’s hinterlands. Without formal territory, their laws governed trading hubs spanning thousands of miles, from London all the way to Western Russia. And, despite being composed of hundreds of member cities, the Hanseatic League had no head of state. Yet the Hansa still managed to sign treaty after treaty with foreign rulers and, a few times, even fought (and won!) wars...The Hanseatic system lasted for nearly 500 years." [more inside]
posted by storybored at 9:28 PM - 15 comments

The sea is no closer to being vanquished by man

To capture not only the facts of a narrative as foreign as the whaling voyage, but also its affect, is a deeply difficult task for any author in 2025, when we are more removed than ever from the material and symbolic grammar that would allow a novel like North Sun to appear “naturally.” It is only through a focused effort to inhabit an older, beastlier worldview that Rutherford manages to pull off the feat, laying aside the formal and ethical strictures that govern contemporary literature in the hopes of communing with those of the nineteenth century. from Whaling Upwards [The Baffler; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 3:12 PM - 8 comments

Voted Australia's 2nd Best Song of all time in 2001

The song in question? Oz band Daddy Cool's Eagle Rock. a 1971 release. It also inspired the "Eagle Drop" a tradition where men drop their trousers and dance whenever the song comes on in a public place. [more inside]
posted by Larry David Syndrome at 2:02 PM - 19 comments

🤘🤘🤘 And so I turn all my tears into a tsunami sea 🤘🤘🤘

Canadian metalcore powerhouse Spiritbox's Tsunami Sea dropped last week. Listen here. [more inside]
posted by signal at 1:38 PM - 5 comments

The Three Stooges' "Brideless Groom"

Shemp is a music teacher navigating the affections of his unattractive and musically challenged student, Miss Dinkelmeyer, while Larry serves as his musical accompanist. Moe then interrupts Shemp's classroom session with news of his uncle Caleb's demise, provoking Shemp's initial disparagement of his late relative. However, Shemp's demeanor swiftly shifts upon learning of his unexpected inheritance of $500,000, prompting a sudden change in his disposition towards his deceased uncle. However, Shemp's windfall comes with a caveat: he must marry within a mere 48-hour window to claim his newfound wealth.* [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 12:33 PM - 13 comments

backup

together they founded the Data Rescue Project to preserve the enormous data sets that website-focussed efforts had missed. Its tracker now catalogues more than four hundred publicly accessible volunteer backups of government repositories… By mid-February, the Data Rescue Project was recruiting from r/DataHoarder and a few related networks. Majstorovic and others began teaching the less experienced members how to back up government data with ArchiveTeam Warrior—an app whose creators have launched a data-rescue campaign—and to upload it to a secure public repository called DataLumos [newyorker/archived]
posted by HearHere at 11:37 AM - 9 comments

Human labor is the new buggy-whip

America Is Missing The New Labor Economy – China's Dominance Playbook, General Purpose Robotics Is The Holy Grail, Robotic Systems Breakdown, Supply Chain Hardships, The West
posted by Fupped Duck at 9:37 AM - 34 comments

More captive-bred orange-bellied parrots released

Another record expected as more captive-bred orange-bellied parrots released. Almost 30 of the critically endangered birds have been released from captivity, buoying expectations for a record-breaking winter migration this year.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 9:36 AM - 2 comments

Labyrinthus Hic habitat Minotaurus

A couple of weeks ago, @pbs.org ran a great new (and free) NOVA episode on “Pompeii’s Secret Underworld.” featuring epigrapher & classicist Rebecca Benefiel, from W&L One of her specialties? Ancient Graffiti. Back in 2011, Prof. Benefiel starting developing an idea for a Pompeii and Herculaneum database for graffiti. It turned into the digital humanities project known as the Ancient Graffiti Project. [more inside]
posted by Fizz at 5:25 AM - 14 comments

Reference and Citate!

Love video games? Can't remember how to reference? Then Western Sydney University has the game for you. Refquest. Defeat the ghouls, gremlins and orcs. Save your campus and get your distinction!

Accelerate your students referencing understanding 2020, Western Sydney University, viewed 14 March 2025, https://refquest.westernsydney.edu.au/ [more inside]
posted by Bluepenguin05 at 3:10 AM - 10 comments

Disarrayed Democrats Debate DC Defunding Dilemma

The US federal government is about to run out of cash to operate (or not). Democrats hoped a House Republican budget plan would faceplant, but Speaker Mike Johnson improbably held his razor-thin majority together to pass a blueprint that would further slash social spending, boost defense, and reinforce an ongoing executive power grab. After House Democrats united (save one) to oppose this, it initially looked like the Senate Dems would follow suit, leveraging their 47 seats to deny the GOP cloture on the continuing resolution (CR) and trigger a government shutdown. But this proved to be an attempt by Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to finesse a symbolic protest vote that would ultimately allow the budget bill to pass. His gambit's messy and very public unraveling has led to a fracture in the caucus: on one side, Schumer and a coterie of establishment figures insist that a shutdown would further empower Trump and Musk to gut the civil service, with no clear offramp. On the other hand, the progressive wing (and even some centrists) believe that endorsing the Republican budget would be political malpractice, weaken attempts to challenge DOGE's moves in court, and do nothing to stop Trump's seizure of the spending power. With the final vote scheduled today, both sides see a defining moment for what Democratic opposition to Trumpism will look like over the next few years. And it's not too late to make your voice heard.
posted by Rhaomi at 3:07 AM - 284 comments

Chinese Democracy

Good Enough Ancestor - "This is the story of Taiwan's democratic transformation as seen through Audrey Tang's eyes, amid a global crisis for democracy." (Taiwan, Sunflower Movement, Audrey Tang previously) [more inside]
posted by kliuless at 2:34 AM - 1 comment

Philosophical questions require more speculative scenarios

Mathematics is extremely precise, but it’s limited to a specific domain. Scientists who speak different languages can use the same mathematics, but they still have to rely on their native languages when they publish a paper; they can’t say everything they need to say with equations alone. Language has to support every type of communication that humans engage in, from debates between politicians to pillow talk between lovers. That’s not what mathematics is for. We could be holding this conversation in any human language that we both understand, but we couldn’t hold it in mathematical equations. As soon as you try and modify mathematics so that it can do those things, it ceases to be mathematics. from Life Is More Than an Engineering Problem, an interview with Ted Chiang [LARB; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 1:47 AM - 11 comments

March 13

I'm just gonna dance all night

Everything is terrible, so for a few moments of levity, how about revisiting Saturday Night Live's Taran Killam, Vanessa Bayer, Bobby Moynihan, and Abby Elliott doing a joyful 4:30 AM interpretation of Robyn's "Call Your Girlfriend" back in 2011? And yes, this was posted about here more than a decade ago, but surely it's worth revisiting. Especially since the gang did a follow-up video in 2020, featuring "Dancing On My Own"!
posted by Synesthesia at 10:53 PM - 6 comments

700 years of Mexico City

700 years ago, an eagle with a snake in its mouth landed on a cactus growing on an island in a marshy lake in the mountains of Mexico. This was a sign foretold by the god Huitzilopochtli and so the Mexica people founded a city there: Tenochtitlán, meaning prickly pear cactus growing on a stone. [more inside]
posted by ssg at 6:09 PM - 13 comments

Some thoughts on the masterpiece 1976 album 2112 by Canadian band Rush

When other bands cite us as an inspiration or an influence, [the theme of 2112 is] what they're talking about, more than anything. I've often read when we're mentioned as an influence for a band they'll say, 'We're big Rush fans, because they did it on their own, they did it their own way, and that told me that I could do the same thing. If I stick with it, persevere, I can do things the way I want them to be.'" via NPR

‘2112’ can be considered many things – a band manifesto, a conceptual landmark, maybe even the birth of prog metal – but above all, it was the band’s play for creative independence. via udiscovermusic [more inside]
posted by ashbury at 5:44 PM - 15 comments

Patricia Highsmith's "Little Tales of Misogyny"

Graham Greene: The great revival of interest in Patricia Highsmith continues with the publication of this legendary, cultish short story collection. With an eerie simplicity of style, Highsmith turns our next-door neighbors into sadistic psychopaths, lying in wait among white picket fences and manicured lawns. In the darkly satiric, often mordantly hilarious sketches that make up Little Tales of Misogyny, Highsmith upsets our conventional notions of female character, revealing the devastating power of these once familiar creatures — "The Dancer," "The Female Novelist," "The Prude" — who destroy both themselves and the men around them. This work attests to Highsmith's reputation as "the poet of apprehension". [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 4:45 PM - 7 comments

Reddit Is Restricting Luigi Mangione Discourse—But It Gets Weirder

Reported by Slate [archive.org]: “I remember r/LuigiMangione got banned, then r/LuigiMangione2, then r/LuigiMangione3, and I think it went up to r/LuigiMangione6 before people were like, ‘We’re not going to keep doing this,’ ” she told me in a phone conversation. “I’d made one called r/LuigiFever, which was just photos of him, and that got banned too.”
posted by AlSweigart at 4:01 PM - 59 comments

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