December 21

Glorious Trash

Glorious Trash has been "trawling the depths of forgotten fiction" for the past 14 years. The depth of its Men's Adventure coverage is suggested by there being 50 entries just for the Nick Carter: Killmaster series alone. But there are also Tough Cops, Post-Nuke Pulps, Ninjas, Nazi She-Devils, and just plain Sleaze. Worth a visit just for the cover art. [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 4:39 PM - 0 comments

We Can Bury Anyone

Private messages detail an alleged campaign to tarnish Blake Lively after she accused Justin Baldoni of misconduct on the set of “It Ends With Us.” During shooting, Blake Lively, the co-star, had complained that Justin Baldoni, the director and a star of the film, and Jamey Heath, the lead producer, had repeatedly violated physical boundaries and made sexual and other inappropriate comments to her. By August, the two men, who had positioned themselves as feminist allies in the #MeToo era, expressed fears that her allegations would become public and taint them, according to a legal complaint that she filed Friday. It claims that their P.R. effort had an explicit goal: to harm Ms. Lively’s reputation instead. [more inside]
posted by Toddles at 4:36 PM - 0 comments

Rickey Henderson passes away at 65

Rickey Henderson, the greatest Oakland A’s player of all time, has died at age 65 Henderson often referred to himself in the third person, and throughout his career there was no shortage of “Rickey” stories. Some were confirmed, others simply enhanced his mythical stature as one of baseball’s most entertaining characters: In the early 1980s the A’s couldn’t balance their accounts until they discovered Henderson had failed to cash a $1 million check, instead framing it on his wall at home. A’s insiders insist this did happen. He holds the all-time steals record, swiping a total of 1,406 bases in his career, 2,295 runs scored, and 81 leadoff home runs Widely regarded as the greatest leadoff hitter in baseball history, he was a staple of the great Oakland A's teams of the 80's and 90's. [more inside]
posted by Carillon at 1:46 PM - 23 comments

A Christmas star

We’re about to fly a spacecraft into the Sun for the first time
posted by chavenet at 1:06 PM - 19 comments

Scientists are fortifying a national park

Countless animals could be saved from extinction thanks to this national park. Scientists are fortifying a national park at the southern tip of Australia's mainland to keep invasive predators away from endangered native plants and animals.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 12:25 PM - 0 comments

Kenji López-Alt: Alcohol, we need to talk

Chef and all round nice human J. Kenji López-Alt (many previouslies) recently came out as an alcoholic, and wanted to share publicly his journey with alcohol, addiction, and recovery (text transcript). [more inside]
posted by splitpeasoup at 10:37 AM - 22 comments

The Woman Who Made Us All Italian

How Marcella Hazan demystified one of the world’s major cuisines for Americans trapped in a Wonder Bread world.
posted by goatdog at 8:16 AM - 12 comments

Twelfth Night Till Candlemas

This post is about finally finding a book from one’s youth forty years later – and after nearly thirty years of searching. It is also a tale about goblins and Christmas decorations; about the perils of ChatGPT and Artificial Intelligence; and about the real value of librarians, cataloguers, indexers, and archivists – what should be called the Noble Professions. And it is an account that ends with not one but two wonderful events.
posted by verstegan at 7:02 AM - 7 comments

How 3D Printing Helps Sea Turtles with Bubble Butt Syndrome

Bubble Butt, also known as positive buoyancy syndrome, is an increasingly common disorder among turtles like Charlotte, a male green sea turtle at Mystic Aquarium in Connecticut. The syndrome is caused by trauma — typically from run-ins with boats — and creates an irregularity in the turtles’ shells that traps air, crowds their organs, and makes it very difficult to swim normally... Dr. Flower and the rest of the veterinary team realized they needed to think outside the box for a solution, and 3D printing was at the top of the list.
posted by ShooBoo at 6:41 AM - 3 comments

Steve de Jarnatt's "Miracle Mile"

Miracle Mile (1988) has the logic of one of those nightmares in which you’re sure something is terrible, hopeless and dangerous, but you can’t get anyone to listen to you. Besides, you have a sneaking suspicion that you might be mistaken. The film begins as a low-key, boy-meets-girl story, and then a telephone is answered by the wrong person and everything goes horribly wrong. Much of the movie’s diabolical effectiveness comes from the fact that it never reveals, until the very end, whether the nightmare is real, or only some sort of tragic misunderstanding. - Roger Ebert (assume spoilers everywhere, inclduing below the fold)
posted by Lemkin at 5:34 AM - 36 comments

gentle into that good night

Here in the waning days of the administration of Joe Biden, two stories: From the WSJ, "How the White House Functioned With a Diminished Biden in Charge," tracing the president's inner circle's efforts to keep tight control over access. And from the NYT, "A Weary Biden Heads for the Exit," offering a portrait of the president's final moments as the most powerful man in the world. (WSJ archive; NYT archive) [more inside]
posted by mittens at 4:41 AM - 50 comments

In his day, no translator was more important, or more prolific

There is, though, a catch. I have been referring to Mansouri as a “translator.” But by contemporary standards, the most popular translator in the history of Iran translated hardly anything at all. Most of his works are a hodgepodge of source text mixed with his own additions and musings, which he offered so generously as to sometimes overwhelm the original. In some cases, the author of the book Mansouri was supposedly translating didn’t even exist. He would write something of his own, then make up a French name and publish his work under the fictive author’s byline. Many would say that one of the most popular literary figures of twentieth-century Iran was a full-blown charlatan. from In Search of Zabihollah Mansouri [The Yale Review]
posted by chavenet at 1:39 AM - 5 comments

He's mysterious, scary and feathered — and he brings presents

He's mysterious, scary and feathered — and he brings presents to outback kids. While many Australians await the arrival of Santa Claus, some kids in outback Australia are celebrating with their own unique Christmas icon, Wangkarnal the Christmas Crow.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 12:58 AM - 6 comments

December 20

Creative Computing

The Best of Creative Computing, Volume 1 (1976) - edited by David Ahl
posted by Lemkin at 5:06 PM - 14 comments

"The more we go online, the less we show up in person."

Welcome to the human doom loop "Throughout the pandemic, the media focused on the idea of the “urban doom loop,” in which remote work would kill downtowns, triggering a downward spiral of reduced services that would cause people to leave cities. What went overlooked has turned out to be the bigger and even more consequential story: the human doom loop, a cycle in which people stop connecting in real life, reducing the quality of in-person activities and the physical realm itself, further discouraging IRL activities, and so on. Nearly five years after the pandemic, it’s not the real estate we need to worry about. It’s us."
posted by box at 2:25 PM - 41 comments

Classical KING FM 98.1

Classical KING FM 98.1

(playlist) [more inside]
posted by y2karl at 12:55 PM - 8 comments

The Keith Richards Connection

Today, Keith Richards turns 81. It’s a hopeless cliche to talk about all the stuff that Richards has survived, so I’m not going to do that. I’m just going to say that Keith Richards is now 81 years old. He is one year younger than Joe Biden and three years older than Donald Trump. To celebrate Richards’ big day, Susanna Hoffs and Elvis Costello have gotten together to cover “Connection,” a song from the Rolling Stones’ 1967 album Between The Buttons.
posted by chavenet at 11:57 AM - 19 comments

Got crabs? Otters maybe the solution.

Southern sea otters are an unexpected solution to invasive European Green Crabs that have been ravishing eco systems on the west coast of North America.
posted by Mitheral at 9:43 AM - 18 comments

Winter cycling in Winnipeg: "My world is so much bigger now"

Commuting to work by bicycle in the winter can be a challenge - especially in the (arguably) coldest city in Canada. But that doesn't stop Daniel Perry, professional double bassist in the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra. [more inside]
posted by warriorqueen at 9:34 AM - 23 comments

Tiny handfish babies delight scientists

At just a few millimetres in length, tiny handfish babies delight scientists. They may look a little like popcorn, but these baby red handfish are giving hope for the species' survival.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 8:41 AM - 10 comments

Drew Magary's yearly hate-post!

The 2024 Hater’s Guide To The Williams-Sonoma Catalog Festivus Airing of Grievances season has officially started!
posted by indianbadger1 at 7:56 AM - 72 comments

Casual Viewing

Netflix’s movies don’t have to abide by any of the norms established over the history of cinema: they don’t have to be profitable, pretty, sexy, intelligent, funny, well-made, or anything else that pulls audiences into theater seats (sln+1) [more inside]
posted by Kitteh at 7:15 AM - 70 comments

Burning Bright

Tasmanian tigers are extinct. Why do people keep seeing them?+ Maybe because they... aren't extinct? As well as searching for thylacines himself, Forrest Galante has been reviewing sightings of them for years. Tiger sightings have a long history in Tasmania and on the Australian mainland. Could it have been hiding out in New Guinea all along? [more inside]
posted by rory at 6:19 AM - 22 comments

Beefsteak Charlie's

Beefsteak Charlie promised, "You're gonna get spoiled". Beefsteak Charlie promised, "I'll feed you like there's no tomorrow." And with unlimited shrimp - plus unlimited beer, wine, or sangria - there wouldn't be. [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 6:02 AM - 3 comments

countdown to shutdown

First, an unelected businessman tanked the budget proposal that would keep the government's lights on a bit longer, prompting ecstatic talk of promotion to Speaker of the House. Next, a businessman who is not yet President made a budget proposal, but like most of his businesses, it fell through. Deep divisions are already beginning to show. Now the race is on: Can Congress come up with a budget they can agree on, by midnight tonight? If not, it's going to be a dark Christmas.
posted by mittens at 3:59 AM - 98 comments

I am but a man like yourselves

It's Friday in the Muslim world, and that means... it's time to read or recite Surah al-Kahf (the Surah of the Cave) ! [more inside]
posted by rabia.elizabeth at 3:38 AM - 4 comments

The Winter Solstice at Newgrange

At the prehistoric passage tomb of Newgrange, built around 3200 BCE, the light from the rising sun at the winter solstice shines along the 19m passage to the wall of the tomb, illuminating the triple spiral carvings. There is a livestream of the event from 8.40am on the 21st (I think that's 3.40am Eastern Standard Time and 12.40am PST). Last year's recording is here. [more inside]
posted by paduasoy at 1:03 AM - 14 comments

If he doesn't win, I can't put on camera what the flag is going to say.

Once in a Lifetime: Argentina is a four-part documentary look at fan culture in Argentina in the lead up to the country's World Cup win in Qatar. It's the latest work by Eli Mengem who has done stellar previous work in documenting football culture with his Derby Days series. If the 2+ hours for Once in a Lifetime: Argentina is too big an ask, maybe have a gander at the Derby Days episode on the Superclásico (55 mins). [more inside]
posted by juv3nal at 12:30 AM - 3 comments

The stunning depth of knowledge this silence covers

These crises never seemed to outstrip the capacity of Melville’s story to offer some illustration and commentary, if not relief. One routine assignment was to formulate a conceptual question about the primary text, then to analyze the way two literary critics have approached dimensions of the question, and finally to propose an analytical response to the question which converses with these critical views. This assignment led many students toward the field of disability studies. The backdrop of the pandemic brought to the fore the investment in ideas of complex embodiment within “Bartleby.” As I modeled the assignment for my socially isolated, increasingly anxious, and depressed students, what emerged from the story and two works of literary criticism about it was a model not just for writing but also for living in a liable, contingent world. from Bartleby’s Insights on Complex Embodiment for a Post-Pandemic World [CommonPlace] [more inside]
posted by chavenet at 12:27 AM - 3 comments

December 19

Just a little bit more toward the goal of a complete OpenStreetMap

StreetComplete: OpenStreetMap surveyor app. An Android app that gives you a friendly interface to help build OpenStreetMap by answering questions as you walk around. Populate surface types, where crosswalks are, if there are trash cans, and so on. (The FAQ mentions both that an iOS version is in the works and there are some alternatives there.)
posted by skynxnex at 10:06 PM - 10 comments

The Ghosts in the Machine

"Spotify, I discovered, not only has partnerships with a web of production companies, which, as one former employee put it, provide Spotify with 'music we benefited from financially,' but also a team of employees working to seed these tracks on playlists across the platform." Liz Pelly investigates the growing problem with so called ghost artists on Spotify for Harper's.
posted by soundofsuburbia at 10:01 PM - 9 comments

Tracking collars uncover secrets of critically endangered Aussie icon

Tracking collars uncover secrets of critically endangered Aussie icon. The habits of the northern hairy-nosed wombat have been a mystery until now, thanks to the animal equivalent of a fitness tracker.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 8:51 PM - 3 comments

Begotten

Begotten
posted by Lemkin at 5:15 PM - 13 comments

Reclaiming the Third Place

“Each year we find ourselves having less social interaction, and we are starting to realize that getting to know people outside of home and work does not just happen on its own,” he said. “We have to be intentional about meeting and talking to others.” from Gen Z Grew Up Chronically Online. Now, They're Craving 'Third Places. [more inside]
posted by Ghidorah at 5:00 PM - 37 comments

The truth is out there...in your neck of the woods

This week Otherworld released Episode 107: The Expedition, which features the story of a young woman and her friend spotting a strange creature near her family's ranch land in east Texas. They enlist the help of the Bigfoot Field Research Organization, an organization dedicated to field investigations into sightings of squatches, as well as documenting stories and evidence in the extensive BFRO Database, and cataloging the latest in Bigfoot hypotheses and research. If you are up for some camping and hiking, a field research expedition might be right for you! Or if want a bit lighter Bigfoot podcast fare, check out the Bigfeets podcast, brought to you by the incredible comedy writers on 1-900 HOT DOG, the absolute last comedy website on the internet. It's the world's only watch along podcast of Mountain Monsters, the which follows the hillbilly Bigfoot-hunting AIMS Crew as search for mysterious Appalachian anomalies.
posted by slogger at 2:45 PM - 9 comments

Samuel Smith's Old Brewery

"He said he had been outside and heard somebody swear. Then he turned to the girl behind the bar and said, ‘Shut this bar and get these out.’" The Arlington is now shuttered. How one eccentric man owns 200 pubs in the UK where swearing and phones are banned. [more inside]
posted by grahamparks at 2:10 PM - 37 comments

10 INPUT "ENTER TRANSACTION",CS: GOSUB 1000

Annoyed by Windows ads, AI and upsell? Macs too expensive? Upgrade cycle got you down? Truth is, you don't really need a lot of computer for many purposes, a fact known by Hilligoss Bakery in Brownsberg, Indiana, which for decades has used Commodore 64s as their cash registers.
posted by JHarris at 1:36 PM - 17 comments

Applies an ax to a job calling for a scalpel

The Most Scathing Book Reviews of 2024 [LitHub]
posted by chavenet at 12:15 PM - 12 comments

Justice Served

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson makes her Broadway debut in & Juliet
posted by mosst at 10:14 AM - 29 comments

"It's the choices we make that define who we are, not our abilities."

The first trailer for much-awaited James Gunn's Superman has been released! [more inside]
posted by Kitteh at 7:15 AM - 148 comments

Google Maps helps catch alleged killers

Google Maps helps catch alleged killers as it snaps man loading car with suspected body. Spanish police say a Google Street View image allegedly showing a man loading a bag into a car has helped them make two arrests in a murder case.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 7:12 AM - 10 comments

Portal Explorer

What happens if you put a portal in a portal? [YouTube, 21min] ...this is my solution to this problem and in this video we will see what's inside of this, what a portal is, how portals can move, how it works, why there is no singularity and what will happen to the object inside ... For this video I wrote a program called Portal Explorer that draws portals using ray tracing. In Portal Explorer, you can put a portal into another portal and explore everything shown in this video by yourself!
posted by Wolfdog at 6:44 AM - 9 comments

John Barton’s “Playing Shakespeare”

In 1982, while working with 21 Royal Shakespeare Company members, including Judi Dench, Ben Kingsley, Ian McKellen, Roger Rees, Patrick Stewart, and David Suchet, John Barton recorded nine workshop sessions for London Weekend Television. - Wikipedia --- 1: The Two Traditions 2. Using the Verse 3. Language & Character 4. Set Speeches & Soliloquies 5. Irony and Ambiguity 6. Passion & Coolness 7. Rehearsing a Text 8. Exploring a Character 9. Poetry & Hidden Poetry [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 6:11 AM - 6 comments

Still providing our customers with free light, heat and energy

Solar-powered cookers are revolutionizing energy access and transforming communities in Rwanda.
posted by rory at 3:11 AM - 15 comments

Not just unbroken, but alive and well

Tattoos, unlike scars, you get to choose. And each tattoo I have is full of so many of my own choices — each of them represents such an important part of me. When I get a new tattoo, it’s like me saying: I want my story told in this color, and this size, in this location, that looks like this, and reminds me of this, and this, and this. So, where my actual scars might reflect these moments of powerlessness? My new scars, the way I choose to mark my body up with tattoos.... I feel this deep PURPOSE in it. I feel the most amazing sense of self. from The Hard Part Out Loud by Oksana Masters [CW: abuse (and survival)] [more inside]
posted by chavenet at 12:59 AM - 4 comments

December 18

A model-led push for change has split Melbourne's life-drawing scene

A model-led push for change has split Melbourne's life-drawing scene. Life modelling attracts people from all walks of life to showcase their bodies, but some in the industry say a reckoning is due for artists who overstep boundaries.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 7:50 PM - 9 comments

US Senate bans affirming care for trans military kids

Today the US Senate voted to pass a defense bill that bans coverage of gender-affirming care for the transgender children of military service members. The vote passed 85-14, with 37 Democrats joining the Republicans in supporting the bill. [more inside]
posted by splitpeasoup at 7:08 PM - 107 comments

murder will out

Remember back in the early 2020s when life was easy and we had nothing to worry about but deadly murder hornets? Well, good news! We don't even have to worry about them anymore, at least in the US: The USDA reports the murder hornet is now eradicated.
posted by mittens at 6:29 PM - 14 comments

Do-It-Yourself McRib

The McRib is back. But you impugn and derogate the sandwich. Then make your own. The Food Wishes guy can show you how. So can Joshua Weissman.
posted by Lemkin at 5:49 PM - 31 comments

Names in upper left

A Cryptid's Carol is the latest episode of the The Forest Jar web series (previously)
At the beginning of this year my life was normal. I was just your typical witch with regular 9 to 5 job interviewing myths, legends, cryptids, and other creations of the human mind
The first year of The Forest Jar is summarized here or can viewed in its entirety here
posted by otherchaz at 4:58 PM - 0 comments

« Older posts