May 7

US TV’s first lead cartoon hijabi

I created the hijabi mom character in #1 Happy Family USA. How she wears it is part of her personality – so I knew I had to get it right By Mona Chalabi
posted by tiny frying pan at 4:01 PM - 0 comments

Grab your hiking pack & get your nerd on; we’ve got a lot to talk about

Stories are cultural artifacts, whether it’s epics on clay tablets or big-budget films. Those artifacts can tell us a lot about the time and culture that made them if we take a few minutes to shake them and see what falls out. To that end, an independent scholar goes rogue from academic respectability, wanders out into the wild, and talks to the trees and rocks about science fiction and its place in historical study. [more inside]
posted by Pirate-Bartender-Zombie-Monkey at 2:31 PM - 0 comments

What’s actually happening is uncanny

The work is intended to distill the content of the most popular YouTuber in the world down to one of its core motifs: the promise of the next number being even bigger: Mr. Beast Saying Increasingly Large Amounts of Money (Abridged version) There is also an unabridged version. by morry kolman
posted by chavenet at 11:16 AM - 32 comments

Dorian Film Awards

A few months ago, GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics announced its Dorian Film Awards for films released in 2024. The Substance (discussion on FanFare) won several Dorians; I Saw the TV Glow (FanFare) won two, Will & Harper (FanFare) won two, and Challengers (FanFare) also won two. "Unsung LGBTQ+ Film of the Year" went to The People's Joker, described in GALECA's press release as a "trans-empowering Batman spoof".
posted by brainwane at 10:19 AM - 2 comments

If you don't like the status quo...

...you deserve to know more about it [more inside]
posted by mahadevan at 10:12 AM - 21 comments

The New Brunswick mystery neurological syndrome solved?

An independent assessment determined the condition is attributable to well known conditions. In 2019, NB Public Health monitored 40 patients with symptoms similiar to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a rare and fatal brain disease. It did not appear to be C-J, but of an unknown origin. It seemed to centre on Acadian Peninsula in northeast New Brunswick and the Monction region in the southeast. [more inside]
posted by Kitteh at 8:40 AM - 19 comments

Footprints uncovered on school foyer boulder date back 200 million years

Footprints uncovered on school foyer boulder date back 200 million years. Scientists say the discovery of 66 footprints on a rock at a Queensland high school are a huge breakthrough in understanding early Jurassic dinosaurs.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 7:21 AM - 4 comments

”Steering is a tiller, pointed directly at my face.”

Aging Wheels is the YouTube channel of a funny guy who likes weird cars—Reliant Robin, Trabant, you name it. Recently he bought two models of Spira, a car so light and economical that the door comes open at highway speeds. (YT 43:19, but it is immediately funny) [more inside]
posted by Countess Elena at 7:05 AM - 17 comments

Fred Dibnah, steeplejack

Let's go back to Bolton, Lancashire, 1979. Everyone speaks with a fantastic Northern accent and uses words like "mither" (to annoy). Nobody wears safety equipment, or even knows what it is. Steeplejack Fred Dibnah, soon to become a national celebrity, is featured in a BBC documentary, dangling precariously from giant chimneys while nonchalantly smoking, and scoffing cheese sandwiches with soot-blackened hands. [more inside]
posted by mokey at 6:14 AM - 12 comments

Everyone Is Cheating Their Way Through College

ChatGPT has unraveled the entire academic project.
posted by Lemkin at 4:51 AM - 154 comments

📚 An interlude for some American small presses 📚

The National Endowment for the Arts is slated for the chopping block in Trump's budget. It has just cut off funding (paywalled, sorry) to, amongst others affected, many of the US's best small presses, including (but not limited to) Arte Publico, BOA Editions, Four Way Books, Hub City Writers Project, Milkweed Editions, Nightboat Books, Red Hen Press, Transit Books, feminist presses Alice James Books and Aunt Lute Books, and presses dedicated to translations, the Center for the Art of Translation, Deep Vellum, Open Letter Books, and Three Percent. [more inside]
posted by joannemerriam at 4:10 AM - 5 comments

So I ended up there...

Wait, What?? Also: Cows. More: Food. Mystery post about Master Tingus. [more inside]
posted by growabrain at 12:58 AM - 7 comments

The architect of the debauchery

To a visitor sitting with him in this bucolic setting that doubles as his backyard, the world he describes can be disorienting. This affable guy, who does odd jobs to supplement his Social Security checks and lives quietly on the fringe of society, did what? from The King of X [Texas Monthly; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 12:15 AM - 7 comments

May 6

you can be confused and you will still laugh and cry and live and die

T'shuva. A translator for the Angels. Fake artifacts. Clowning. The four winners of the 2024 Otherwise Award (formerly the Tiptree Award), and the Long List of five additional works, are speculative fiction stories that expand and explore our understanding of gender. You can read two of the stories - “The Flame in You” by L. Nabang, and “Scarlett” by Everdeen Mason - online. The Otherwise Award previously. [more inside]
posted by kristi at 10:51 PM - 2 comments

Endangered little tern has experienced one of its best breeding seasons

Incredible comeback for endangered shorebirds. The endangered little tern has experienced one of its best breeding seasons in decades, with the highest-ever number of fledglings recorded by scientists. (Australia)
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 8:02 PM - 4 comments

The devious Republican plan to cut NIH’s budget

The NIH budget is on a fast track to disaster. As someone working at NIH, I lay out the insider view of what Republicans seem to be doing, what could play out in Congress, how changes within NIH are designed to produce budget cuts, and how people who care about medical treatments and cures might now respond.
posted by subdee at 8:01 PM - 3 comments

The theory does not say where the quantum weirdness is supposed to stop

The cat’s cultural appeal lies in the ‘what if’ questions it provokes. It encourages us to ponder the consequences of our very human choices. What if we choose not to look? If we don’t look, can the cat really be said to exist at all? Our decision to lift the lid is much like encountering a fork in the road. We choose a path. Like the American poet Robert Frost, we may choose the path less travelled by. But what if we had taken the other path? from The cat that wouldn’t die [Aeon]
posted by chavenet at 10:38 AM - 42 comments

Stories for Mob keeps culture alive, engages adults learning to read

Stories for Mob keeps culture alive, engages adults learning to read. A Koori writing group is helping meet a need for more books with storylines Aboriginal people can relate to, and which inspire them to keep reading. (Mob is a colloquial term identifying a group of Aboriginal people associated with a particular place or country, eg Noongar country. It is used to connect and identify who an Aboriginal person is and where they are from. Mob can represent your family group, clan group or wider Aboriginal community group.)
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 8:56 AM - 1 comment

The LGBTQIA+ News Post, Sooner Than Expected: May 6, 2025

Time moves fast, and the news gathers. But here we go with another news post. And no matter what, Don't Give Up. [more inside]
posted by mephron at 8:03 AM - 27 comments

📚 Trois petites presses canadiennes #7 📚

Under the fold, Quebecois small presses Baraka Books, DC Books, and Véhicule Press. [more inside]
posted by joannemerriam at 6:46 AM - 2 comments

Mr. Carney goes to Washington

Following his election win, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is visiting Washington, D.C. for preliminary negotiations with U.S. regime leaders. [more inside]
posted by mrjohnmuller at 4:45 AM - 92 comments

May 5

The Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Incompetence (and Corruption)

Telemarketers Are Using a Weird Trick to Sell Bare-Bones Health Plans [ungated] - "How a former TV comedy writer's fake-job loophole could blow up Obamacare." [more inside]
posted by kliuless at 11:56 PM - 26 comments

A superposition of fraud and genius

In a recent column about "narrow banking" and the crypto ecosystem, Bloomberg's Matt Levine quoted an old (2011) blog post by Steve Randy Waldman at Interfluidity that tries to answer the question Why is finance so complex?
posted by chavenet at 11:35 PM - 9 comments

"Our belief in the mission of the Hugo Awards ... guides our actions"

File 770, back on April 7: "2025 Hugo Finalists - Where to Read Complete Works or Samples for Free." But also, uh, today, "Seattle Worldcon 2025 Hugo Administrators and WSFS Division Head Resign"; May 5 (item 5), "SOMEBODY STILL WANTS TO RUN A WORLDCON? The Brisbane in 28 Worldcon bid woke from its ordinary social media slumber to leave this announcement ..."; May 2, "Seattle 2025 Chair Apologizes for Use of ChatGPT to Vet Program Participants"; May 2, "Seattle Worldcon 2025 ChatGPT Controversy Roundup"; April 30, "Responding to Controversy, Seattle Worldcon Defends Using ChatGPT to Vet Program Participants." Seattle Worldcon 2025 has a blog for news and announcements. Incidentally, File 770's awards tag leads to news about other awards, e.g. the 2025 Locus Awards Top Ten Finalists were announced on May 2.
posted by Wobbuffet at 8:32 PM - 52 comments

Homes built after 2010 twice as energy-efficient as older homes

Homes built after 2010 twice as energy-efficient as older homes. CoreLogic data shows the 6.27 million homes built pre-2010 have a median 2.8-star energy rating, while the 1.5 million built post-2010 have a median 5.9 rating. (Australia).
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 8:25 PM - 18 comments

Any big plans for your FREE time in May?

It's May! It's springtime!* It's another Free Thread! Is the nice weather inspiring you to take on fun / exciting / bothersome / necessary plans? [more inside]
posted by Greg_Ace at 7:52 PM - 55 comments

The Beauty Hidden in the People Around You

Sometimes the reason you can’t find people you resonate with is because you misread the ones you meet. Henrik Karlsson reflects on discovering true friends.
posted by storybored at 5:33 PM - 15 comments

Joe Pass

Joe Pass and Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen perform "Donna Lee"
posted by Lemkin at 4:35 PM - 7 comments

Sans-culottes in cool blue suit.

"Jacques Esnauts and Michel Rapilly created the 'Galerie des Modes, a series of colored fashion plates and portfolios. It was published from 1778-1787 and distributed in Paris. Over 400 plates were issued over the ten year period and were produced by prominent eighteenth century designers and engravers...In 1911 Emile Lévy published a reproduction of the Galerie des Modes, re engraving the plates and coloring them by hand as were the original." This previous post is an excellent read on the subject. Alors, sans plus tarder... [more inside]
posted by clavdivs at 3:57 PM - 1 comment

For a fearlessness that led to her departure from the news organization

Ann Telnaes, who resigned in protest from the Washington Post after the Editorial Board *coughJeffBezos*cough* spiked her editorial cartoon of Bezos and other CEOs genuflecting before Trump, won a Pulitzer Prize for her work. (Selection of cartoons at the link.) The Pulitzers, the most prestigious award in journalism, were announced today. Despite the general decline of news organizations and a depressing obeisance to the administration, the awards recognized a lot of great work in 2024 that probably was under most people's radar (but not Metafilter's, occasionally!). Among the other big winners were: [more inside]
posted by martin q blank at 3:07 PM - 10 comments

She’s basically hitting the rhythmic bullseye over and over and over

This Sea Lion Can Headbang Better Than You [Smithsonian]
posted by chavenet at 11:46 AM - 21 comments

I once had my entire memory erased from staring at a stoplight

"Greetings. I seem to have difficulty connecting with others. Perhaps it's due to the fact that I misperceive blinking as a threat. Maybe it stems from developing a pack mentality with any bug I capture." Whatever trials Difficulty Man's ludicrous life presents him with, you can be sure he'll tackle it head-on, boldly marching forward into his next impossible misunderstanding. Here's the complete playlist of his adventures so far. Here's a highlight reel, and the most recent, where he discovers a lost civilization. Difficulty Man's adventures average about three minutes each. (TW: In one of his videos [#6], he briefly annoys a Trump support gathering.)
posted by JHarris at 11:39 AM - 3 comments

CHEEZIES! CHEEZIES! CHEEZIES!

Are Hawkins Cheezies the Snack Food of Canadian Sovereignty? Belleville, Ontario represent! [more inside]
posted by Kitteh at 11:18 AM - 69 comments

People Are Losing Loved Ones to AI-Fueled Spiritual Fantasies

Self-styled prophets are claiming they have 'awakened' chatbots and accessed the secrets of the universe through ChatGPT.
posted by clawsoon at 9:59 AM - 128 comments

How light pollution affects connection to First Nations culture

Dark skies have always been home: How light pollution affects connection to First Nations culture. The dark night sky has special meaning for Krystal de Napoli, an astrophysicist and Gomeroi woman, but light pollution is erasing constellations from view that have guided her peoples' connection with Country since time immemorial, she writes.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 5:04 AM - 1 comment

📚 Canadian small press hat-trick #6 (One Great City edition) 📚

Under the fold, Winnipeg small presses: ARP Books, At Bay Press, and Signature Editions. [more inside]
posted by joannemerriam at 4:44 AM - 5 comments

"Day 14: Hauling stones; spends the night in Tura South"

The star of the Red Sea Scrolls is undoubtedly a man called Merer, a mid-level official or inspector who oversaw a team of forty men transporting limestone for Giza on a ship named The Uraeus of Khufu Is Its Prow
In Gold and Lapis Lazuli is an essay [archive] by archeologist Robert Cioffi about the Diary of Merer, the logbook of a crew working on the Great Pyramid of Giza. It was part of a cache of the oldest papyri yet discovered, uncovered by archeologist Pierre Tallet and his team at Wadi al-Jarf, an ancient Egyptian harbor on the Red Sea coast.
posted by Kattullus at 4:09 AM - 10 comments

Is it possible to discover who is hiding behind the cat pictures?

You might have received a text message from a somewhat strange phone number saying a package is on its way to you. But to receive the package, you have to click on a link and fill out a form asking for your credit card details. You are about to be scammed. Who is behind it? from The Hunt for Darcula [NRK]
posted by chavenet at 12:42 AM - 27 comments

May 4

"Hands down, electric rail is the best"

"We compared land transport options for getting to net zero. Hands down, electric rail is the best." The only way to reduce soaring transport emissions is to shift as much travel as possible to the lowest-emission option.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 5:55 PM - 33 comments

Begging the Question...

WaPo Opinion: This common phrase is widely misused. Is it worth salvaging?
(ungated) [more inside]
posted by Rash at 2:32 PM - 106 comments

I Never Thought the Jaguars Would Eat 𝘔𝘺 Face

I Should Have Seen This Coming by David Brooks [The Atlantic; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 1:36 PM - 112 comments

GOG is selling a broken game

The Games: Winter Challenge (1991) contains subtle copy protection that renders several lategame challenges unbeatable if you improperly hack the copy protection. Unfortunately, almost every rerelease improperly hacks the copy protection. Detailed technical writeup by MrWint.
posted by one for the books at 10:12 AM - 11 comments

Long Live Pere Ubu, RIP David Thomas

One of the most unique voices in rock music and the creative force behind the avant-garde rock band Pere Ubu, David Thomas has died at age 71. His death was announced in a post on Pere Ubu's official Facebook page. [more inside]
posted by SansPoint at 9:41 AM - 35 comments

You're special, sweetheart.

Short Calf Muscle (YouTube, 12m45s, Dutch audio, English subs): famously tolerant country, the Netherlands. From Short Frame.
posted by flabdablet at 7:40 AM - 5 comments

More than anything, writing this was an exercise in frustration

As quivering masses of protoplasm, we all filter reality through the same set of feeble sensory organs, so any attempt to portray being as we understand it bears intrinsic limitations. As an -ism, the style at issue is merely shorthand for confining a story to reality. That doesn’t mean realism is sacrosanct. from Lucia Berlin vs. Raymond Carver: Who Is the Real Patron Saint of Realism? [LitHub]
posted by chavenet at 2:33 AM - 13 comments

Ocean Vuong on Suffering, Kindness and Stepping Back From the Abyss

The occasion for what turned out to be one of the most emotionally intense interviews I've ever done [ungated, yt] - "That story and your book connect to a larger question I have about the country: What do you understand about places like East Hartford that doesn't get communicated widely enough?" [more inside]
posted by kliuless at 12:21 AM - 12 comments

May 3

The lost MingKwai typewriter has been found

While Jennifer and Nelson Felix were cleaning out her late grandfather's basement, they found an unusual Chinese-character typewriter. Curious, Nelson posted pictures to the Facebook group What's My Typewriter Worth. [more inside]
posted by tavella at 10:28 PM - 12 comments

Street signs with proper Arrernte names appear overnight

Street signs with proper Arrernte names appear overnight in Alice Springs (Australia). Unapproved street signs in Arrernte language have been installed as cultural guides alongside the town's originals, with QR codes linking to the words' correct pronunciations and background on their meanings.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 7:35 PM - 8 comments

The smallest gift, shared with wonder, can spark passion for a lifetime

David Attenborough turned 99 this week, with his birthday falling on the average return date of the swift to Britain. To celebrate this beloved and revered environmentalist, humanitarian and broadcaster, The Guardian asked 99 nature lovers: authors, leaders, actors, activists and more, to comment on how he has helped us see the world with new eyes.
posted by Thella at 5:51 PM - 9 comments

NO CUTS TO MEDICAID!

"[But] if what they're proposing actually becomes law, it would be the single biggest transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich in a single bill in US history." Paul Krugman interviews Bobby Kogan of the Center for American Progress about Trump's "big, beautiful" budget. [more inside]
posted by subdee at 12:42 PM - 80 comments

« Older posts