January 15

Habit-forming for good with Finch

Is there something you can do on your phone that's the opposite of doom-scrolling? It would probably need to be cute and encouraging and maybe it somehow allows friends to support each other... That's basically what Finch is trying to do. sadly, their own website provides very little information about what using the app is like, so I've selected some reviews to give you an idea. [more inside]
posted by demi-octopus at 2:59 PM - 4 comments

peace

Israel and Hamas have agreed a Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal following 15 months of war, mediators Qatar and the Us say. The ceasefire deal will take effect on 19 January, but a long-term truce is still being negotiated. BBC live coverage. Al Jazeera live coverage.
posted by fight or flight at 11:43 AM - 37 comments

Perpetual Blue

Andreas Wannerstedt is a stockholm based artist and art director who crafts unique 3D sculptures and mesmerizing looping animations. The imagery of Andreas is both sophisticated and whimsical, featuring simple and playful geometric shapes in balanced compositions, together with organic textures and harmonizing color palettes.
posted by chavenet at 11:15 AM - 3 comments

This Middle-Man, This Monster

Until 2020 Diamond Comic Distributors had a decades-long near-monopoly as supplier of comics & merchandise to the North American direct market. This changed following the arrival of COVID-19 when many of the biggest publishers signed deals with new distributors. Yesterday Diamond announced that it had filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the United states Bankruptcy Code. [more inside]
posted by Alvy Ampersand at 10:00 AM - 17 comments

"I kept a running list of aspects around blindness that could be included"

"[Joe] strechay has a unique role in the entertainment business: making sure people with visual impairments are portrayed realistically -- well, at least as realistically as they can be in a sci-fi show about a post-apocalyptic world where everyone is sightless."
posted by jessamyn at 9:26 AM - 5 comments

surviving War and HIV

Queer, HIV-Positive, and Running Out of Medication in Gaza [more inside]
posted by toastyk at 7:14 AM - 2 comments

spenser starke's "Alice is Missing"

Alice is Missing is a stunningly beautiful storytelling game that delivers an utterly unique and unforgettable experience. ... A high school student named Alice has gone missing, and the players will take on the roles of her friends as they try to figure out what happened while dealing with the emotional trauma of her disappearance. The central conceit of the game is this: You don’t talk. Instead, all of your interactions — all of your roleplaying — takes place via text messaging. ... Alice is Missing is one of the best storytelling games ever made. [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 5:59 AM - 9 comments

"LMNOP - Midtown."

"sections of the Alphabet, a guide" is a short Tumblr post that describes the 26 letters as belonging to 5 distinct neighborhoods. "The heavy lifters in this area draw a sharp disparity with Q, which is unique for its specialist role."
posted by brainwane at 5:06 AM - 9 comments

Rock the ship, Baby

"The famous king of Babylon Nebuchadnezzar II was lately enthroned when a group of Phoenician sailors watched their boat sink in shallow water off the coast of spain ... The sailors would have been beside themselves watching the boat go down in just 7 feet of water, but before they could recover it and bring it to the shore around 65 yards away, a storm suddenly descended on La Playa de la Isla in the town of Mazarron, southeastern spain": Divers Recover Ancient shipwreck Amazingly Preserved for 2,600 Years Beneath spanish Waters. [more inside]
posted by taz at 2:37 AM - 15 comments

Vietnam fines reckless drivers half the average annual salary

Vietnam fines reckless drivers half the average annual salary. Vietnam, where 11,500 people die in traffic accidents every year, has introduced severe new penalties for those who break road rules as well as bounties for those who dob them in.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 1:26 AM - 27 comments

Lynkedin Lyrics

Tags: mondegreen
posted by one for the books at 12:19 AM - 11 comments

Cunning Linguists

The American Dialect society has selected rawdog as Word of the Year for 2024. [more inside]
posted by Westringia F. at 12:16 AM - 55 comments

The fusion of several trends that have been coalescing for some time

Now the outlines of a popular political movement are becoming clearer, and this movement has no relation at all to the right or the left as we know them. The philosophers of the Enlightenment, whose belief in the possibility of law-based democratic states gave us both the American and French Revolutions, railed against what they called obscurantism: darkness, obfuscation, irrationality. But the prophets of what we might now call the New Obscurantism offer exactly those things: magical solutions, an aura of spirituality, superstition, and the cultivation of fear. from The New Rasputins by Anne Applebaum [The Atlantic; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 12:07 AM - 20 comments

January 14

Of Autocrats and the Media

For many, Hungary’s Victor Orban is the contemporary patron saint of autocratic rule. Certainly, he leaves “little doubt over what his model calls for,” A.G. sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times noted in a Washington Post op-ed this fall citing, “loud applause from attendees of a Republican political conference held in Budapest in 2022,” when Orban said, “Dear friends: We must have our own media.” [more inside]
posted by Violet Blue at 8:12 PM - 10 comments

AlmazanKitchen

The YouTube channel of AlmazanKitchen is technically a series of advertisements for its fancy-pants chef's knife. It is also the most intense, voice-free, music-free, 4K food porn you will ever see. suggested starting points: Pork Belly with Crispy skin. Carbonara with Handmade Pasta and Dry-Aged Bacon. Cheese and Egg Toast. Carolina Reaper Triple Chili Chicken Wings. szechuan Pork Noodles.
posted by Lemkin at 5:07 PM - 20 comments

Click here for a very good cry. (many good boys)

The Good Dogs (and People) of the LA Wildfires [YouTube short approx 2:56] With quiet apologies to the good people now discussing the properties of good posting in Metatalk, I offer this single link because someone may appreciate a good cry right now. [more inside]
posted by Glinn at 4:12 PM - 7 comments

Cynicism is the cheap seats.

We Don't Need More Cynics. We Need More Builders.
"Here’s a more charitable reading of cynicism: it’s not an intellectual position. It’s an emotional defense mechanism. If you expect the worst, you’ll never be disappointed. If you assume everything is corrupt, you can’t be betrayed. But this protection comes at a terrible price. The cynic builds emotional armor that also functions as a prison, keeping out not just pain but also possibility, connection, and growth."
posted by otherchaz at 2:43 PM - 68 comments

Giant neon-pink slugs back with a vengeance after bushfires

Giant neon-pink slugs back with a vengeance after bushfires. Citizen slug sleuths are helping scientists keep track of unique creatures that have made a remarkable comeback at Mount Kaputar in New south Wales (Australia).
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 1:17 PM - 9 comments

"I have been lucky — living two lives in one lifetime"

Mike Rinder, spokesman for and then critic of scientology, dead at 69.
posted by chavenet at 12:03 PM - 15 comments

Finally, an actually useful function for home security cameras.

Homeowner captures sound and video of meteorite strike on camera, and scientists believe it's a first.
posted by jacquilynne at 10:27 AM - 34 comments

Day One

"Day One" is a short scifi story by K. Duncan, published December 2024 in Trollbreath Magazine. The author notes "It's more or less a manifesto. It's about what could happen, and what has to." and "A 2023 that might have happened, in braver, more just world". He was still a shill for corporations and developers, for charter schools, still worthless on prison and poverty, but it was like an electric shock and a game-end Gatorade soak to hear him say “I am ordering the immediate disarmament of the Philadelphia Police Department.”
posted by brainwane at 10:02 AM - 4 comments

WEsT-OF-HOUsE “West of House”

The Visible Zorker – Play Zork in one pane and follow the original ZIL source code and state of the virtual machine in adjacent panes as you play. (Or just read Andrew Plotkin's article about making this visualization.)
posted by Wolfdog at 9:24 AM - 13 comments

Where to go? Not at starbucks, unless you buy something

CNN Business: starbucks ends its 'open-door' policies. A new Coffeehouse Code of Conduct was announced and allegedly posted on their doors yesterday, reversing the 2018 decision to let anybody hang out there. [more inside]
posted by Rash at 8:22 AM - 82 comments

"slow blur/roses in the snow"

Black Tape For A Blue Girl: Live at the Middle East, Boston, July 21 1998 (sLYT, except here's a Bandcamp link)
posted by box at 7:55 AM - 4 comments

What is RedNote?

American users are turning to RedNote, the Chinese equivalent of Instagram/Pinterest, ahead of a looming TikTok ban, which legislators are now urging Biden to extend the Jan 19 deadline for. TikTok has called rumors that it is considering a sale to Elon Musk, "pure fiction", and its parent company ByteDance has said that it would shut down rather than sell to an American buyer. [more inside]
posted by toastyk at 6:56 AM - 86 comments

stern's RUsH Pinball

You like Canadian prog-rock? You like pinball? Have I got something for you.
posted by Lemkin at 5:52 AM - 44 comments

rocks

When Caillois reads “the writing of stones,” when he pores over the whorls and swirls in an agate, he ponders the revelation of cosmic time they grant him. “They provide moreover, taken on the spot and at a certain instant of its development, an irreversible cut made into the fabric of the universe. Like fossil imprints, this mark, this trace, is not only an effigy, but the thing itself stabilized by a miracle, which attests to itself and to the hidden laws of our shared formation where the whole of nature was borne along.” [cabinet] [more inside]
posted by HearHere at 3:52 AM - 5 comments

“and it has haunted not just me but the birding community at large”

The Wrongest Bird in Movie History is an episode of the slate podcast Decoder Ring [transcript]. In it guest producer Forrest Wickman goes in search of the answer to a question that has bedeviled birders for a quarter-century: Why is the bird identified as a ‘Pygmy Nuthatch’ in the Charlie Angels movie neither look nor sound like a Pygmy Nuthatch? And boy, does Wickman get answers.
posted by Kattullus at 1:59 AM - 21 comments

Too much of a sensitive loner to be a Fascist

Acquiescing to the way the world works is one of the temptations of being a journalist, and in Italy, for nearly a generation, the way the world worked had been Fascist. If it was now to be democratic instead, then so much the better. Journalism also taught Buzzati—when he wasn’t dealing with naval battles—the value of precise, concrete writing. from A Man Out of Time [Harper's; ungated]. [more inside]
posted by chavenet at 12:38 AM - 4 comments

January 13

On the strasmin, the Oistrem, and Far-Off Botaram

After a decade of inactivity, the epic strange-setting fantasy comic A stray to Botaram has resumed updating; the author has vowed to see the journey to the end. This was preceded by a project to remaster old pages and turn text posts into pages, so whether this is new or old to you, I suggest starting from the beginning, at what only initially looks like a newspaper comic strip from an alternate reality, here.
posted by BiggerJ at 11:36 PM - 6 comments

The second

"In an alternate version of today’s world where dueling is still acceptable, Philip, a man of tradition, must perform the role of “second” on the day of his only son’s duel." [more inside]
posted by maxwelton at 10:06 PM - 6 comments

Taquitos.net turns 25

"We've eaten 11,501 snacks spanning 87 categories from 2056 companies in 96 countries. That's 164 major brands and 163 flavors." (previously) (more previously) (even more previously)
posted by Lemkin at 5:07 PM - 16 comments

Wood Turning with Richard Raffan

Richard Raffan is a long-time wood turner with a large number of videos on YouTube. They might be too inside-baseball to be of general interest, but if you like watching things made by a master craftsman and artist, you may enjoy them. This is Richard’s YouTube home page . [more inside]
posted by Gilgamesh's Chauffeur at 3:21 PM - 8 comments

…It takes a lot of time, it takes a lot of practice…

"I think the majority of people don’t enjoy the majority of time they spend making music.” If it's been more than 24 hours since you last flew into a rage about tech-bros who want to “disrupt” art without understanding the first thing about art, have I got an interview for you! [more inside]
posted by signal at 2:55 PM - 35 comments

Eagle-eyed teen helps capture rogue frog on Tassie lavender farm

Eagle-eyed teen helps capture rogue frog on Tassie lavender farm (Tasmania, Australia). A 13-year-old girl found and helped capture an invasive Peron's tree frog after a tourist's photo posted online alerted authorities of the biosecurity threat. Tasmania is an island, so it does not have the same frog species and frog diseases which are found on mainland Australia. [more inside]
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 2:34 PM - 5 comments

"The form is one page long. No back. Just a front."

"six People to Revise You" by J.R. Dawson, a short and moving science fiction story published January 2025 in Uncanny Magazine (available in text and audio), begins:
A parent or guardian
someone who has known you since childhood
A mentor or teacher
An employer or coworker
A spouse, partner, or close intimate friend
someone who does not consider themself a loved one
posted by brainwane at 10:46 AM - 30 comments

the anglerfish

There Is No safe Word. How the best-selling fantasy author Neil Gaiman hid the darkest parts of himself for decades. [Non-paywalled link.
Content warning: contains graphic descriptions of child abuse and sexual assault and emotional/sexual abuse.]
posted by fight or flight at 9:19 AM - 305 comments

society to Advocate for the Return of Intermissions in Movies

FANFARE THIs WEEK... New movies: everyone's Criterion Closet buddy Pamela Anderson stuns in The Last showgirl; "Holocaust tours, with lunch" in A Real Pain; a Hungarian-born architect immigrates to the Us in bladder-busting 215 minute epic The Brutalist; running, quips in hit sequel sonic the Hedgehog 3; a biopic of UK pop star Robbie Williams with a CGI chimp in the title role in Better Man; sean Wang's critically acclaimed coming-of-age dramedy Dìdi; and dead-eyed Philomena Cunk asks the worst possible questions in Cunk on Life. And, in TV: star Wars spinoff skeleton Crew; post-apocalypse drama/mystery silo; the serial-killer-in-his-youth prequel series Dexter: Original sin; Netflix's buzzy new western American Primeval; post-COVID ER dramaThe Pitt; and the highly anticipated Abbott Elementary/It's Always sunny in Philadelphia crossover. [more inside]
posted by DirtyOldTown at 8:25 AM - 53 comments

The 25 Best Films of 2024

[Content Warning: a lot of blood, brief glimpses of body horror, there is an image of a character in one film starting to be enveloped in flames.]

Indiewire's chief film critic, David Ehrlich presented his annual, and expertly edited, montage of his 25 Best Films of 2024 (Vimeo). [more inside]
posted by Atreides at 8:13 AM - 13 comments

"Really?"

Did you even consider every possible lived experience before recklessly posting your chili recipe on social media?
posted by box at 7:45 AM - 114 comments

The cost of the Canadian dream

(slCBC) The Canadian government announced on Oct. 24, 2024 that it is scaling back on immigration targets for the next three years, immediately cutting 2025’s target by 21 per cent, and more for the years after. The number of temporary residents, including international students and foreign workers, will also be considerably reduced.
posted by Kitteh at 6:40 AM - 19 comments

Hello, baby

This is important: We exist in time. Whenever someone is born, it opens a window into time, a glimpse of the universe that stretches from the moment your eyes first blink open until they finally shut. This is about to be your window.
(WaPo column by Alexandra Petri, gift link)
posted by kyleg at 6:25 AM - 8 comments

Fripp & Eno's "(No Pussyfooting)"

"The Heavenly Music Corporation". "swastika Girls". [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 5:54 AM - 19 comments

The MeFite as noisemaker... it's your weekly free thread

What sort of noises do you make? Do you make music like Alice Coltrane? Are you a cross-linguistic onomatopoiea fan? Or are optical sound effects more your thing? Ever enter a yodeling contest, like they have at the Iowa state Fair? Or is the groan more your thing, as with groaning boards, groaning ghosts, or plain groaners? Perhaps your noises are more fundamental? There's more to life than noise, though. How are you doing? What's happening this week in your life?
posted by cupcakeninja at 5:09 AM - 97 comments

The secretive annual migration of Christmas Island's blue crabs

The secretive annual migration of Christmas Island's blue crabs. You've heard of the Christmas Island red crab migration. But what about the blue one? Christmas Island's blue crab migration is low key, even for locals. The blue crab species Discoplax celeste is only found on Christmas Island. It is one of more than 20 species of land crab on the island. The blue crab migration to the coast happens around January or February each year.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 1:41 AM - 4 comments

A basic conceptual re-orientation is a necessary starting point

Blaming nature or the climate for disasters deflects responsibility. It is largely human influence that produces vulnerability. Pointing the finger at natural causes creates a politically convenient crisis narrative that is used to justify reactive disaster laws and policies. For example, it is easier for city governments to blame nature instead of addressing human-caused social and physical vulnerability. A deflection of responsibility also leads to a continuation of an unequitable status quo where the most vulnerable people in society are worst affected repeatedly in every disaster. A discourse that attributes disasters to nature paves a subtle exit path for those responsible for creating vulnerability. from stop blaming the climate for disasters [Nature; pdf]
posted by chavenet at 1:08 AM - 10 comments

January 12

What section 31 says about the Federation

star Trek: section 31 is about the most dangerous idea in Trek canon. Mary sue founder susana Polo writes, "either section 31 is a betrayal of everything the Federation stands for, or the Federation isn’t utopian.".
posted by a faded photo of their beloved at 9:37 PM - 61 comments

The Public Domain Image Archive and more from The Public Domain Review

Infinite View, shuffle View, and Catalogue View are three ways to explore the Public Domain Image Archive recently announced by The Public Domain Review. Coverage at Open Culture and Hyperallergic. More details about the project. Bluesky account to follow for updates. Also at The Public Domain Review this week: "The public airing of grievances continues in the next and final issue of 391 ... Picabia describes surrealism as 'Dada disguised as an advertising balloon for the house of Breton & Co.', and Breton as 'an actor who wants all the leading roles in the theatre of illusionists'"--Daisy sainsbury on "Perpetual Movement: Francis Picabia's 391 Review (1917–1924)." Bluesky account for The Public Domain Review.
posted by Wobbuffet at 9:01 PM - 6 comments

Ay-Ya-Ya-Ya-Yah

so, you want to demonstrate the speedrunning of one of the greatest arcade racing experiences ever, but there's a small problem with the music licensing. The answer - speedrun Crazy Taxi with a live band doing the backing. (sLYT)
posted by NoxAeternum at 5:39 PM - 27 comments

steven soderbergh's "solaris"

At a time when many American movies pump up every fugitive emotion into a clanging assault on the audience, soderbergh’s solaris is quiet and introspective. There are some shocks and surprises, but this is not Alien. It is a workshop for a discussion of human identity. It considers not only how we relate to others, but how we relate to our ideas of others. - Roger Ebert [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 4:35 PM - 28 comments

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