That gossip's eye will look too soon

Jan. 16th, 2026 09:00 am
sovay: (Claude Rains)
[personal profile] sovay
Alexander Knox was born on this date a hundred and nineteen years ago and without him I might never have discovered that the fan magazines of classical Hollywood could get as specifically thirsty as the modern internet.

Come to that, you would have been pretty tasty in the pulpit, too, Alex. You look, except for that glint in your eyes and that dimple in your cheek, like a minister's son. You look serious, even studious. You dress quietly, in grays and blacks and browns. Your interests are in bookish things. You live in a furnished apartment on the Strip in Hollywood, and have few possessions. You like to "travel light," you said so. You like to move about a lot, always have and always will. You've lived in a trunk for so many years you are, you explained, used to it. Of course, you've been married twice, which rather confuses the issue. But perhaps two can travel as lightly as one, if they put their minds to it. But you do have books. You have libraries in three places. At home, in Canada. At the farm in Connecticut, of which you are part owner, and in the apartment where you and your bride Doris Nolan still live. You write, which would come in handy with sermons. You're dreamy when you play the piano. For the most part it isn't, let's face it, church music you play. But you could convert.

Gladys Hall, "Memo to Alex Knox" (Screenland, August 1945)
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
This collection of links to local mutual aid funds, food banks, and other organizations doing work on the ground:

https://www.standwithminnesota.com/

HR vids and edits - recs

Jan. 17th, 2026 01:44 am
mific: (Heated rivalry)
[personal profile] mific
Okay, a few vids and edits. Sound absolutely on with them all!

First, two funny edits by hoechloin (tumblr - links now to gdrive as tumblr censored the posts) with soundtracks and embellishments that make me laugh out loud - Shane freaking out and being his dorky self:

edit 1

edit 2

Fanvids:

an angsty one to Casual by Chappell Roan by Leocities (play it with closed captions to get the most out of the great editing to the lyrics)

and a happier one to Long Time Running by The Tragically Hip by peakyboyos

US politics

Jan. 16th, 2026 06:51 am
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (Default)
[personal profile] yhlee
By way of [personal profile] sovay: Stand with Minnesota, appears to be locally vetted. I've made a modest donation to one of the listed organizations.

(Still buried under health + family + work + school stuff as well, sorry - if I'm not responding or late to respond, that's why.)

Valerian Tea

Jan. 16th, 2026 09:37 am
smokingboot: (dreams)
[personal profile] smokingboot
Insomnia has been a real difficulty recently, so I decided to try some Valerian tea from the local herbalists. Tried a cup when I got it yesterday, conked out within 30 minutes. Interesting! Lots of images and faces, surface dreams. Last night I tried again, and it took a while, possibly because of the earlier siesta, though I entered a properly relaxed state very quickly. Sleep, when it came, was very deep and lasted til 9 this morning.

Dreams of a younger person, very devoted, beside me. Baths, people submerging into their baths under the water, cluttered room, a very beautiful combination of black and green around me. This tea also combined Chamomile. The best sleep I had was in Crete, after cups of Chamomile flowerhead tea, but this stuff was sold loose at the old market in Chania. Dude had gone into the hills, gathered it and dried it, there you go. It worked extremely well. Russ buys it here for me and it does work, though nowhere near as effectively.

This tea combines Chamomile with Valerian, and it's good but it feels more... active. Like Chamomile brings you calm sleep, Valerian brings you deep sleep. Also, winter sleep and summer sleep are never the same. Lack of them is, though; you get scratchy and weird and make mistakes. I'll continue to use it but will probably wait until our guests go home on Sunday in case it makes me sleepy throughout the day. They'll be here this evening, one may well be very tired, the other requires delicate handling. Might see if they want to try the tea.

Oh, and the visit to the doctor? Pfff.

(no subject)

Jan. 16th, 2026 09:40 am
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin
Happy birthday, [personal profile] msilverstar!
swan_tower: (Default)
[personal profile] swan_tower
In these days of climate change, the notion of coastal areas going underwater is a familiar fear. But it's not a new one; we have stories of drowned lands going back for thousands of years.

The famous example, of course, is Atlantis. Which Plato wrote about for allegorical purposes, not literal ones: he was making a point about society, building up Atlantis as a negative foil to the perfections of Athens. That hasn't stopped later writers from taking the idea and running with it, though, with interest particularly surging after Europeans learned of the New World. That's one of many locations since identified with Atlantis, with considerable effort expended on identifying a real-world inspiration for Plato's story (Thera leads the pack) . . . alongside wild theories that build up the sunken land as a place of advanced technology and magic. The supposed "lost continents" of Lemuria and Mu -- which may be the same thing, or may be synonymous with Atlantis -- are later inventions, discredited by the development of geological science.

We don't have to lose whole continents to the ocean, though. The shorelines of northern Europe are dotted with legends of regions sunk below the waves: the city of Ys on the coast of Brittany, Lyonesse in Cornwall, Cantre'r Gwaelod in Wales' Cardigan Bay. Natural features can contribute to these legends; the beaches of Cardigan Bay have ridges, termed sarnau, which run out into the ocean and have been taken for causeways, and environmental conditions at Ynyslas have preserved the stumps of submerged trees, which emerge at times of low tide. The so-called Yonaguni Monument in Japan and Bimini Road in the Bahamas are eerily regular-looking stone formations that theorists have mistaken for human construction, again raising the specter of a forgotten society drowned by the sea.

Many of the examples I'm most familiar with come from Europe, but this isn't solely a European phenomenon. I suspect you can get stories of this kind anywhere there's a coastline, especially if the offshore terrain is shallow enough for land to have genuinely been submerged by rising sea levels. Tamil and Sanskrit literature going back two thousand years has stories about places lost to the ocean, which is part of why some modern Tamil writers seized on the idea of Lemuria (supposedly positioned to the south of India). It doesn't even have to be salt water! A late eighteenth-century Russian text has the city of Kitezh sinking into Lake Svetloyar: a rather pyrrhic miracle delivered by God when the inhabitants prayed to be saved from a Mongol invasion.

Some drowned lands are entirely factual. Doggerland is the name given to the region of the North Sea that used to connect the British Isles to mainland Europe, before rising sea levels at the end of the last glaciation inundated the area. Archaeological investigation of the terrain is difficult, but artifacts and human bones have been dredged up from the depths. If we go into another Ice Age, Doggerland could re-emerge from the sea -- and if it had been flooded in a later era, what's down there could include monumental temples and other such dramatic features. We're robbed of such exciting discoveries by the fact that it was inhabited only by nomadic hunter-gatherers . . . which, of course, need not limit a fictional example!

Doggerland was submerged over the course of thousands of years, but most stories of this kind involve a sudden inundation. That may not be unrealistic: after an extended period in which the Mediterranean basin was mostly or entirely cut off from the Atlantic Ocean, the Zanclean flood broke through what is now the Strait of Gibraltar and refilled the basin over the course of anything from two years to as little as a few months. Water levels may have risen as fast as ten meters a day! Of course, the region before then would have been hellishly hot and arid rather than the pleasant home of a happy civilization, but it's still dramatic to imagine.

Then there are the phantom islands. I have these on the brain right now because the upcoming duology I'm writing with Alyc Helms as M.A. Carrick, the Sea Beyond, makes extensive use of these, but they've fascinated me for far longer than we've been working on the series.

"Phantom island" is the general term used for islands that turn out not to be real. Some of these, like Atlantis, are entirely mythical, existing only in stories whose tellers may not ever have meant them to be more than metaphor. Others, however, are a consequence of the intense difficulties of maritime travel. Mirages and fog banks can make sailors believe they've spotted land where there is none . . . or they see an actual, factual place, but they don't realize where they are.

To understand how that can happen, you have to think about navigation in the past. We've had methods of calculating latitude for a long time, but they were often imprecise, and a error of even one degree can mean your position is off by nearly seventy miles/a hundred kilometers. Meanwhile, as I've mentioned before, longitude was a profoundly intractable problem until about two hundred and fifty years ago, with seafarers unable to make more than educated guesses as to their east-west position -- guesses that could be off by hundreds and hundreds of miles.

The result is that even if you saw a real piece of land, did you know where it was? You would chart it to the best of your ability, but somebody else later sailing through (what they thought was) the same patch of sea might spot nothing at all. Or they'd find land they thought looked like what you'd described, except it was in another location. Well-identified masses could be mistaken for new ones if ships wrongly calculated their current position, especially since accurate coastal charts were also difficult to make when your movements were at the mercy of wind and current.

Phantom islands therefore moved all over the map, vanishing and reappearing, or having their names reattached to new places as we became sure of those latter. Some of them persisted into the twentieth century, when we finally amassed enough technology (like satellites) to know for certain what is and is not out there in the ocean. There are still a few cases where people wonder if an island appeared and then sank again, though we know now that the conditions which can make that happen are fairly rare -- and usually involve volcanic eruptions.

The sea still feels like a place of mystery, though, where all kinds of wonders might lie just over the horizon. And depending on how much we succeed or fail at controlling global temperatures and the encroachments of the sea, we may genuinely wind up with sunken cities to form a new generation of cautionary tales . . .

Patreon banner saying "This post is brought to you by my imaginative backers at Patreon. To join their ranks, click here!"

(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://is.gd/kKc80k)

Side note re: Souls and summons

Jan. 16th, 2026 08:53 am
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
Elden Ring also has the summons mechanic.

Which is how the fandom ended up with a sort of folk hero who appears as a naked man with a jar on his head holding two katanas and soloes the game's hardest boss for you:

IGN: We Spoke to 'Let Me Solo Her,' the Elden Ring Community Hero We Need and Deserve

YouTube: Let me solo her. 3rd summon solo Malenia (you don't have to know the game to appreciate that this is someone doing something perfectly)

Choices (12)

Jan. 16th, 2026 08:36 am
the_comfortable_courtesan: image of a fan c. 1810 (Default)
[personal profile] the_comfortable_courtesan
What they deemed an odd specimen

Cecil, Baron Rondegate, occasional took pleasure in strumming on the keys: but would not do this on Zipsie’s fine Broadwood, no, that was far beyond his touch. Had obtained a far more modest instrument that he kept in the smoking-room, where he could attempt to sound out, perchance, the melodies of Clo Marshall’s songs – lord, 'twas some while since he had made an excursion to the Beaufoyle Arms Song and Supper Rooms!

Coming in one afternoon, at an hour when he hoped he might avoid tea-table company, he met Mrs Knowles on the stairs on her way out, made civil – for she was not only an excellent musical friend for Zipsie, her husband was a chap that one would very much wish to know better and be on good terms with. Known for quite the soundest advice in financial matters – had saved a deal of his acquaintance from bad investments – very well-connected –

Mrs Knowles smiled at him and said, Lady Rondegate was looking exceeding well, but hoped she was not over-doing – those boisterous sisters of hers were very good-hearted creatures but –

Cecil grinned. Their exuberance can be a little wearing! And this performance for Lady Abertyldd’s birthday makes demands

Mrs Knowles gave a genteel snort. I apprehend that young Oliver still lingers in Heggleton – was he in Town he might take some of the burden of rehearsals from her –

Why, his grandfather writes that he comes around to showing very responsible over learning about their business, and matters to do with the election.

Her mouth quirked. That is something! – for although Ollie was no longer embroiled with that dangerous fast set had still been something of an idle wastrel about Town – but I must be upon my ways.

Cecil bowed over her hand as they made their farewells. He proceeded to the music-room, that was where he supposed Zipsie would have been entertaining Mrs Knowles.

There was, indeed, evidence of tea and the crumbs of cake!

Zipsie was sat at the pianoforte, picking out a tune – good lord, it was Clo Marshall’s 'Oo does 'e think 'e is?

She turned and smiled. Do you ring for tea, should you care for some – or something stronger, mayhap?

A very small brandy and soda would come very agreeable, he conceded, and went to ring.

When this had come, along with a bowl of smoked nuts, and he had refreshed himself, she swung around on the piano-stool and said that he had found her out in trying to work out one of those very pleasing tunes she had heard him playing when she passed the smoking-room t’other day.

Why, he responded, raising his eyebrows somewhat, 'tis one of Clo Marshall’s songs –

Oh, I have heard so much about those, from Ollie and Folly, but they say very unsuited to ladies’ ears – she snorted in a most unladylike fashion – mayhap the words are vulgar? but the tunes are very clever, I am not at all give to wonder that they are whistled everywhere.

She grinned. La, one is told that the errand-boys in Vienna went about whistling the tunes from Mozart’s operas! There is a deal of nonsense about low taste –

He looked at his wife. There was really something most out of the common about Zipsie. That had ever found conventionality somewhat constraining – one saw that being married and freed from the edicts on the conduct proper to a young lady that had not yet attained that state was most congenial to her –

Why, the words may be somewhat vulgar – in the cant of the lower orders, Cockney – but not in the least coarse – very amuzing – Miss Marshall has a great talent for presenting 'em – fine voice –

Zipsie sighed. I daresay 'twould not be proper to go attend one of her performances?

He considered upon this. My dear, I can see ways that it might be contrived, but as things are at present, fancy 'twould be a little imprudent.

O, entirely, she sighed. That was one of the reasons for Mrs Knowles’ call – to give me the sound advice on the management of my condition that she had had from her mother – has not everybody cried up the late Lady Ferraby to me as the entire paragon in such matters?

The clock chimed.

Fie, I should go dress for dinner! – do you dine at home the e’en?

Indeed I do.

He rang for another small brandy and soda before going to change himself, musing upon whether they should give a dinner-party afore Town was completely deserted – might one invite the Grigsons? Lady Lucretia was in mourning for her brother, that was, it was give out, no great loss, but a quiet dinner party would surely be permissible? The Knowles – unless they were going out of Town to one or other of their family connexion – had he not heard that the Demingtons still lingered? – mayhap the Samuels –

It was a very reassuring sight to observe with what great appetite Zipsie ate her vittles at dinner! He remarked upon this, at which she grinned. Law, do I not feel sick, I am quite ravenous, 'tis one or t’other all day. Either nibbling a little dry toast, or devouring a beefsteak. Mrs Knowles tells me that matters are wont to regularize in due course, that I am glad to hear.

That minded him that she had said that there was another reason for Mrs Knowles’ call – I hope, my dear, that is she soliciting you to perform at her musical soirées, you will not be overdoing –

O, she did mention that, mayhap, when Society finally returns to Town, and I will be feeling more the thing, that would be on the cards, but what she was concerned about was Thea –

Thea?

This matter of Miss Billston’s songs of Sappho, that are indeed quite exquisite, and that are entirely suited to Thea’s voice, but Mrs Knowles came about to apologize for being pressing on the matter, and hopes has not embarrassed Thea, knowing how very strict Lord Pockinford’s views are, and Sappho not only being a pagan poetess, but noted for her passionate devotion to women.

Cecil blinked.

Alas, she says, here we were, brought up in the Raxdell House Phalanstery, acquired rather broader notions concerning who might rightly love who – observed fine examples of female devotion

What?

Zipsie looked at him. Why, there are Miss McKeown and Miss Lewis, have been the dearest of friends this entire age – Lady Jane Knighton’s fine affection to Miss Addington – the Ladies of Attervale and of Yeomans – and she told me, there was quite the deepest devotion 'twixt the late Lady Ferraby and Dowager Lady Bexbury.

Is it not give out they were related?

O, beyond any mere feeling for kindred! But, alas, there is Lord Pockinford, that speaks out against sisterhoods, that seem a very sensible solution for ladies that do not marry, and would one fears feel the same about ladies that find mutual society, help, and comfort with one another rather than a husband.

Cecil stared at his wife. This was quite the revelation, both about these happy female couples, and Zipsie’s entirely commonsensical feelings about 'em.

He gulped. I have observed, he said at length, that there may be similar devotions between men….

'Tis indeed rumoured, said Zipsie, but does one mention it one is cautioned not to speak thus, because of the injustices of the law.

She fell silent, frowning. After some minutes, she said, I have observed that you and Mr Davison sort exceeding well together – come about on excellent terms – fine manly friendship?

Cecil looked across the table at her and then down at his hands. He swallowed. Indeed I come into a more than usual, one may only call it fondness for him, and he to me. But – he also greatly likes you – and we would not for the world do anything you liked not, Zipsie –

She paused again, arranging the orange peel on her plate into patterns. After a considerable while she cleared her throat and began, sure I have found marriage a great deal more agreeable than I anticipated, and you far exceed my expectations in a husband! Very much was, o, this is a thing I am obliged to do. But –

She blushed. I was talking once to Aunty Dodo, when I was somewhat younger, and said it must be a fine thing to marry a musician – I had something of a girlish admiration then for Uncle Casimir – and she sighed, and said, music can be a demanding mistress and then put her hand to her mouth and begged me not to disclose what she had said to Mama. But while I may not be a composer to compare with Uncle Casimir, nonetheless, I am, I find, a musician.

And there was a conversation I had lately with Mrs Lucas, that happened to remark that she kept a space in her life for poetry – there she is, the fondest of wives and mothers, doatingest of grandmothers, &C – said that as she went about her day kept by her ivory tablets to jot down lines or thoughts she had, for such time as she might give her mind to composition.

So while I do not think I will ever become one of those ladies that goes dally with gentlemen that are not my lawful wedded husband, there is something that is a passion – that I fancy might at times preoccupy me in ways that some husbands might resent, for whom one is supposed to forsake all others, and I daresay that would include the muses.

Also, she said with a grin, there is Mr Davison has that very snug fellowship at Oxford, 'tis not the like of setting up some Miss in a villa in St John’s Wood like Lord Iffling and decking her with jewellery. She giggled at his expression. La, Lady Lucretia disclosed to me certain family matters over the teacups one day.

Zipsie, said Cecil, you are quite magnificent and a paragon amongst womankind. And, he thought with an inward grin, as well as a fine musician, the grand-daughter of Sir Oliver Brumpage, he had noted that when she was about the household books!

Zipsie wrinkled her nose and said, she fancied she was what they deemed an odd specimen.

He opened to her the project of going to Wepperell Larches – bachelor party including Sallington and Julius Roberts – giving it out that I have some notion to making a Persian garden –

She raised her eyebrows. Then said that 'twould certainly look somewhat less particular. And minded that they, too, were bred in the Raxdell House Phalanstery.

Babylon 5 2x07 "Soul Mates"

Jan. 15th, 2026 10:19 pm
sholio: (B5-station)
[personal profile] sholio
I rewatched this one tonight, mostly for the Timov of it all, but also ...

Spoilers for the episode )
erinptah: nebula (space)
[personal profile] erinptah

It’s no longer the 15th of the month as I’m finishing this post…but I ran all the numbers on the 15th, so I’m counting it as a regular scheduled update.

I’ve finished one A-to-Z pass of “handing off and/or punting specific webcomics.” In total, that knocked a couple hundred fandoms off my list. Guess I’ll do another, go harder, and knock out a couple hundred more.

There was a point when I thought about starting a habit of “sweep the Unassigned Fandoms list for tiny underloved Christmas movies,” because sweeping for underloved webcomics was working well. Didn’t end up doing it regularly, though — I just got 12 movie fandoms with 1 fic each, and stopped there. So I dropped all of those in an afternoon. (In the years I was babysitting them, the most active of these fandoms came out with…a whole 2nd fic.)

I also dropped some Random Things that I picked up through the irregular process of “checked out a new canon, enjoyed it, went to see if there was any fic on AO3, found an unwrangled fandom with 1 work.” Stuff like Phoebe in Wonderland (2008), Gary and His Demons (Cartoon), or Her Voice is a Backwards Record – Ozy Brennan. They almost certainly won’t suffer if they stay unwrangled for a while.

(There’s still only one fic for Shadow Man – Melissa Scott…and it’s the one I wrote. Guess it’s depressingly safe to leave “the queer intersex revolution/romance where everyone’s on space drugs” unwrangled, huh.)

With bigger Random Things, when they’re active enough I don’t want to leave them unwrangled, I’ve been making the occasional post about “looking to hand off this fandom, will anybody take it?” Breaks up the monotony of the batches of webtoons, I think. And it’s had maybe a 50-50 success rate — not bad. I’ll keep at it.

…I did actually add 2 new fandoms since the last update. A couple fans wrote about the Toon Makers US Sailor Moon pilot for Yuletide 2025, so that has a fandom tag now, and I picked it up to go with the rest of the Sailor Moon fandom tree.

Then it came up in the “wranglers wanted” channel that Pet Shop of Horrors was unassigned. And how was I supposed to resist picking up PSOH? I love PSOH. That manga reread I just recently started will pair perfectly with a review of the existing PSOH tags.

So my current total number of fandoms is 1183. (The number of “fandoms that actually have any new tags to deal with right now” is 28.)

344 down, 733 more to go…

Just One Last Look to Fill My Heart

Jan. 19th, 2026 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

And now, at long last ... the last pictures of our European Vacation, an odyssey full of disappointments and delights. It ends, as you'd hope, with snacks.

P1090695.jpeg

The bag we got our dinner in one night, which I love just because ``eet smakelijk'' looks like something you might come up with if you were faking Dutch for ``eat smiling''.


P1090696.jpeg

Oh yeah, one of the bags of baby carrots that they gave us as we left Plopsaland for some reason. Not just us; everyone got two bags per. I have no explanation for this phenomenon.


P1090700.jpeg

And now, sad to say, we had to leave. Here's a view from De Lijn of Plopsaland; you can see the hotel up front and The Ride to Happiness behind.


P1090702.jpeg

More views of Plopsaland from afar.


P1090704.jpeg

And the the sad last look at Plopsaland, on the train bringing us to Amsterdam. It was a sad evening.


P1090705.jpeg

We stopped to change trains in Gent, which I didn't recognize as the Ghent, but we were fascinated by and curious what this handsome-looking building in the distance was. Turns out, it was the (historic) Ghent train station.


P1090706.jpeg

We were stumped thinking what it was, having nothing but these remote views. There was plenty of structure above --- and below --- us that was obviously modern train station so it didn't occur to us these were all part of the same train station complex.


P1090709.jpeg

One of my favorite compositions of [personal profile] bunnyhugger looking out of frame. ... In hindsight if I'd paid attention to the Gent-Sint-Pieters sign I'd have realized where we were but, have to admit, we were mostly sad and rushed.


P1090716.jpeg

Still, there were pigeons having a good time, so that's nice.


P1090717.jpeg

And come the next day we got to the airport, which still had the old-style click-click-click destination board! Mostly; the flight numbers and air liveries were on flat TV screens. But the signs still clicked, like destination signs ought.


P1090719.jpeg

Also, a picture of one of the snacks we'd bring back to Michigan with us to have with afternoon coffee break. A Nutri-Score of E means it's Excellent, right?


P1090720.jpeg

You can tell this is a quality wafer chocolate snack by its affording a seven-differences puzzle.


Trivia: On its second flyby of Earth, in December 1992, the Galileo probe flew 300 kilometers above the South Atlantic and within one kilometer of the intended target, accurate enough that post-Earth trajectory maneuver TCM-18 was cancelled, saving about five kilograms of propellant for later mission operations. Source: Mission To Jupiter: A History of the Galileo Project, Michael Meltzer.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

It Just Isn't Long Enough

Jan. 18th, 2026 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

In pictures, I'd like to share the last of our photos at Oostende and then getting back to our hotel, as we had to leave early and get to Amsterdam for our early-morning flight.

P1090665.jpeg

Here's what it looks like when you'd think you could just hop onto a drawbridge as it closes. I bet if you tried all sorts of people would be tense at you, though.


P1090666.jpeg

And we're back and traffic can move freely again!


P1090669.jpeg

Under the overhang here are those portals to the bicycle dimension, and far in the background is De Lijn.


P1090670.jpeg

Unfortunately they have vehicle-wrapping advertisements in Belgium too, but at least the ones in Dutch read funny. (It translates something like 'So that's the taste of pleasure'.)


P1090671.jpeg

Here's our train! It looks so very narrow but it's an extremely normal size once you're in.


P1090676.jpeg

Unfortunately the ride back was so packed there was no good photograph-taking, or even sitting. But we got back to our home station and hey, here's that blue ring again!


P1090677.jpeg

Statue standing outside the welkom-in-De-Panne center of a woman who looks like she's seen better days maybe, but so have we all.


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Also found in De Panne: funny supermarket names!


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Really big fans of American television networks here.


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And this was our hotel. I think we were on the second floor, so you could actually see our hotel room from here.


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There comes a point where you have so much fire extinguishing technology on display at the hotel that it becomes unsettling. I know you're asking why that second fire extinguisher is chained up but don't worry, there's a guy comes around with the key every like five minutes.


P1090693.jpeg

The view out our window, which makes this corner of De Panne look like a SimCity 2000 location.


Trivia: By 1777, thanks to Lavoisier's research, France was able to produce two million pounds of saltpeter per year, with a yield considered the best in the world. By the 1780s it could propel cannonballs 50 percent farther than British powder did. Source: The Invention of Air: A Story of Science, Faith, Revolution, and the Birth of America, Steven Johnson.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

Sunday for the first time in years we made the not-quite-two-hour drive to Fremont, out somewhere near nothing in the world. The main reason for this is that the Clubhouse Arcade there --- formerly Special When Lit, formerly the Blind Squirrel League --- is the location of this year's Michigan State Pinball Championship, both Open and Women's, and [personal profile] bunnyhugger needed the practice time. Might still need some more.

But also going on was the first Michigan Seniors Pinball Championship. This event, really a just-for-fun thing, was open only to pinball players fifty years or older, which [personal profile] bunnyhugger and I are both in. (There was also a Youth Championship, which eight kids played in, though one had to leave early.) This threatened to be an all-day thing, and it nearly was, for other people.

Qualifying started with twelve rounds of matchplay, drawing people in random pairs on random games, many but not all of them in the State Championship this coming weekend. And I, dear reader, started out with a loss on Golden Arrow after putting up a should-be-awfully-good 81,120 (or something) score; my opponent got just a couple thousand more. All right; that happens. Then came another loss, this time on my best-ever game of X's and O's, a caveman-themed tic-tac-toe game which has a huge skill shot if you can make it the first five seconds of your ball plunging into the shooter lane. I had practiced this ahead of time and managed it once out of three times, ordinarily enough to win a game even if you don't, as I had, blow it up all three balls. But what do you know but my opponent came back and whittled away all that score on me. Then on to Joker Poker, and a loss; then on to Jacks To Open, and a terrible loss. At this point I was four games in, out of twelve, and was doing as well as if I had stayed home in bed. I can't say I was heartened.

But then my luck changed! With the next game, Blackout, I had a killer first ball and my opponent never got close again. And this started a heck of a winning streak, with my getting wins both impressive and deserved (Future Spa, Barracora, World Cup) and total nonsense (Surf Champ, a race to the bottom that I lost). I even beat CST on an electromechanical game, to my endless amazement. Ten games in, I was at the cut for finals and looking good.

But then my luck changed! With a close loss on Firepower and then having to go up against PH on Scuba, a 1960s game with tiny flippers that I had maybe one good ball on, to PH's four. Ah well. I would have to play a seven-way tiebreaker for the last six spots in playoffs, and on my old Pinburgh friend Jungle Queen. I came in in the middle of the pack, which is fine, as the important thing is that I not come in last.

I might as well have, though. Playoffs were double-elimination group-of-three games and I lost early and often, becoming one of the first players to lose two rounds. [personal profile] bunnyhugger, who'd won more games than I had in qualifying, had a similarly disheartening race-out-of-qualifying, knocked out in the winners bracket by the guy I lost on X's and O's to, and in the second chance bracket to PH who somehow hadn't won his first round. PH would go on not just to beat [personal profile] bunnyhugger but also everyone else in the second chance bracket, putting him up against the winners bracket champion, the always formidable CST. And PH went on to beat CST two matches in a row, taking the first ever state Seniors Championship in dramatic fashion. Do like to see that being exciting at least.

The advantage of being knocked out fast in playoffs, though, is that [personal profile] bunnyhugger was able to sniff around the games, trying them out, gathering intelligence to use this coming Sunday. Hopefully to use a lot of it, but pinball is fickle and anything can happen. I'll share the news with you when it's there to share.


Back to Oostende and our walking around while we could in that truncated Sunday in Belgium, back in June.

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Now, if we'd known there would be restaurants we might have got something to eat here. Note the Señorita Daisy so apparently you can get either Spanish or Mexican food in Belgium. Also, burgers and fries.


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We were intrigued by what the Bistro Beethoven might be, but also weren't hungry. You can see it's connected to Beethoven's Cafe, though.


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Getting ready to return to the tram line and oh, what's this? The drawbridge is drawing!


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Look at the underside of that bridge. Almost no chewing gum stuck to it at all!


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And here's the boat making its way down the channel, that we all stopped and waited for.


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Bye!


Trivia: The mistle thrush is one of the few birds to eat mistletoe without harm. It excretes the semi-digested slime from the inside of mistletoe fruits, which the plant hopes to have land on tree branches, stick and sprout seeds. Source: Slime: A Natural History, Susanne Wedlich.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

taz_39: (Default)
[personal profile] taz_39
**Disclaimer** The views and opinions expressed in this post are my own, and do not reflect the views or opinions of my employer. DO NOT RESHARE ANY PART OF THIS POST WITHOUT PERMISSION. Thank you.

This post covers Wednesday and Thursday.

---    ---    ---    ---    ---    ---

WEDNESDAY

I did decide to go to the fine arts museum today! Packed a lunch and rode the light rail over, ate lunch outside (it was thankfully nice enough for that) and then went exploring!! (Please remember that you can click on ANY picture to open in a new tab and then enlarge by clicking it again)
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The museum is massive, taking up three buildings connected by an underground tunnel. I decided to walk to the farthest building first and work my way back, hopefully ensuring that I'd see as much as possible while working my way back toward the main entrance rather than away from it.

The connecting tunnel was very pretty! There were two parts, one was an optical illusion that made it seem like you were walking in a tight tunnel when actually it was open on either side (no footage because there were a lot of people in there) and the other part was simply vibrantly colorful and fun to walk through :)

(CLICK HERE to see my idiot face walking through this tunnel.)
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The farthest building housed most of the modern/contemporary art. Though I didn't linger in EVERY gallery, I did walk through them all, pausing to read when something caught my eye or seemed interesting. Most people seemed to stick to the main building, so often I had whole galleries to myself for several minutes at a time.
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There were a lot of interactive pieces here and that was a lot of fun. Some art you had to walk back and forth in front of to see correctly (optical illusion/spatial stuff), others needed you to push a button to activate or were motion activated. This one was immersive; it's a piece called “Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity” by Yayoi Kusama.

(DreamWidth people, CLICK HERE to see this art since I can't embed from facebook.)


Here was a piece within the Gyula Cocice Intergalactic exhibit. This particular one reminded me of pointillism illustrations in a book I had as a kid.
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This was one of my favorites that I saw today. It's by a Latin American artist I believe, but I forgot to take pic of the description.
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Walter Draesner, "A Danse Macabre." This was a book collection of 22 silhouette papercuts, opened to this page. I want to see them ALL!
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A wall clock in a modern furniture section. The little cloud in the circle ticked the seconds while the lightning was the minute/hour hands. Absolutely adorable.
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Ernie Barne's "The Sugar Shack," depicting people dancing at a juke joint. Loved the movement and energy, and having just seen the movie Sinners which takes place in a juke joint this had a stronger meaning.
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The next building housed a lot of international collections. In the Islamic Countries gallery, this silver filigree diffuser. The detail was so intense. I could have stared for hours.
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I always enjoy seeing ivory art/carvings. Loved this ivory powder horn with so many animals carved into it! And I love the little organic fractures and lines that you can see in the ivory.
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This display was called "Power of Flight" and was in the Peruvian gallery. As a fan of raptors and flying things, I thought all of these were beautiful. There's even a little silver bat near the bottom right (I know it looks gold but in person it was silver.)
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The Art of Africa section was very big and featured art and relics from many African nations. This elephant mask was a favorite.
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A huge display describing the staves/staffs held by the linguists of Ghana, who were counselors to the chiefs and also relayed the word and law of the chief to the people. The ornate staves were a sign of authority, and the unique work at the top of each one was usually centered on a proverb or morals/values lessons that people were expected to remember and abide by. Zoom in on the picture to see the top of each staff, they are very interesting!
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I had stopped to rest and sort photos once or twice, but otherwise after about two hours I'd walked nearly 3 miles and made it back to the main building. I could feel that I was running out of energy for looking at exquisite things, but this last building only had two floors. There were unfortunately some large and rowdy school groups in the galleries here, so I couldn't get close to a lot of the art and/or had to circle back a few times to see things I'd missed due to crowding. But that's ok, I still got to see a lot and it seemed like everyone was enjoying the museum :)

I also want to mention this, meant as a positive, um...advisal. There were two women who were clearly there for social media purposes. One was dressed beautifully, and the other followed her around with a camera, taking photos of her next to art or looking at art from a variety of angles. Although it was obvious what they were doing, they had paid admission, they were quiet and respectful, they didn't touch or damage anything, and they didn't get in anyone's way or spend any more time in front of the artwork than anyone else. The advisal is this: if people are doing an activity that is NOT disruptive, but YOU have a problem with it...the problem is YOU. Whether it's social media photoshoots or something else. We can CHOOSE to be annoyed by things that do not involve us, or we can CHOOSE to move on with our day unaffected.

Where's the linguist's staff depicting the moral of THAT story? Lol.

The ground floor had an "Art and Life in Imperial Rome" exhibit. Mostly statues, pottery, pillars...the stuff that we all associate with Roman and Greek culture. I liked this chunk of a frieze depicting an angel...the movement of the angel coupled with the interesting shape of the slab was aesthetically pleasing. And with the huge student groups filling up this gallery, it was one of few pieces I was able to get close enough to to photograph.

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The second floor had Impressionist and Renaissance and churchy art, but also a “Louvre Couture” dresses exhibit. Thirty-six dresses/ensembles were designed by known fashion houses to complement the exhibits where they were placed. I saw most of the dresses/outfits, but these two were my favorite.
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This one was I believe meant to be inspired by chain mail/armor. I'd wear it!!
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There are a few more pictures and descriptions on my facebook.

I rode the light rail back feeling like my eyeballs were just full of color and form :) Even having walked 3 1/2 miles and spent 2 1/2 hours in there, I STILL had not seen everything! (For example I completely forgot about the sculpture garden!) I will have to go back someday. MFAH is absolutely wonderful, highly recommend to anyone visiting Houston (and don't forget the Natural Science Museum which is also incredible, I've visited that one three times!!)

Back home I grabbed a snack and some rest, then typed this up, ate dinner, and walked to the theater. Nothing new there, just a regular show with an announcement after the bows about Disney's Stage Connect, which is a FREE program allowing grade schools to put on Disney musicals FOR FREE, plus additional FREE teacher training and coaching to make it happen. With so many schools not even offering arts programs or considering them expendable in favor of, say, sports, I think this is an AWESOME program! Here's a chance that kids might not otherwise have, to experience the arts and what it's like to be a part of a stage show.

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THURSDAY

Up a bit early from traffic noise, and didn't have any plans. Breakfast, working on Fayetteville AR Foodie Finds, and probably spent two hours or so working on my masterclass powerpoint. In fact when Jameson texted to share how his day was going, I was surprised to see that it was already past noon! But I am nearly done making it. Even with AI help, shoving text and images and bullet points around feels so clunky. It looks "OK," but I am definitely a PPT amateur!

Lunch and getting my hands on some carbon fiber trombone mutes via an order through Schmitt Music. Yes I know, I just had 3D-printed mutes made for me this past year, but after buying a new bass trombone they don't fit properly in the new one's bell. After asking the maker several times (over the course of months) to send me resized corks--which can fit in a letter envelope and would take him 5 minutes to slap a stamp on and send--months later it's clear that he's not going to do it. So I'm calling it a loss and starting over. Maybe on the next layoff I can return his mutes to him for a partial refund.

Debated doing anything today, but I just don't have anything TO do that's not going to cost money. I just bought a trombone, am still paying off Christmas purchases, and will be buying a LOT of tickets for family in Philly. The museum was great, treating myself to the movies was great, and I'll do one Foodie Find on Friday, and that'll do me for Houston :)

The evening show was good, at least for me personally. It has taken NINE stinking days but I'm finally back in "tour mode." 

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Friday: One evening show. Walking to a grocery to pick up some travel foods, and I found a random Vietnamese restaurant known for banh xeo (one of my favorites!) so that will be my Foodie Find! 

Saturday and Sunday: Two-show days, no plans except to pack and prepare for Oklahoma City!

Somebody Check My Brain

Jan. 16th, 2026 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

In my humor blog this week, as you've seen on your Reading page or perhaps in your RSS reader (LiveJournal Friends Pages count) you've seen the end of one MiSTing, a whole brand-new one, two panels from a dumb comic book, some comic strip action, and me complaining about AI scraping. Want to live it all again? Here's your chance:


And in pictures, we're as far along De Lijn as we would get and walking around some before heading back to our hotel. Take a look.

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And here we are at Oostende's famous Cathedral ... uh ... something. Just love all that spikiness, though; it's very soothing to keep looking at and spotting new detail.


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And a monument nearby to the soldiers and dead of the World Wars.


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Not sure if the smaller structure, left, is the old cathedral or merely a church.


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The older cathedral has this text explaining it, although the shadow of the inset makes it a difficult thing to photograph and so transcribe.


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Another view of the cathedral, looking even richer with detail than before.


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Small sign letting you know about the mausoleum here too.


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Sometimes you just need to get really close to an enormous building and look up.


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Sometimes you just need to get not quite so close to an enormous older building and look up.


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Found the Hidden Mickey! Up on top of the frame there, turned upside-down.


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Huh! Now what would a heraldic shield and a pointing brass arrow mean for us?


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Well, look at that, we're being led around the cathedral right to ...


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... a big communal space? I'm not sure we needed the guidance here. Maybe it makes sense if you've got the pocket guide. Please note that this is a duly-posted Zone.


Trivia: In 2017 World Bank chief economist Paul Romer was stripped of control of the research division after declaring he would not clear any report for publication if the word ``and'' made up more than 2.6% of its text. Source: Seriously Curious: The Facts and Figures That Turn Our World Upside-Down, Editor Tom Standage. Romer claimed to be trying to improve the readability of reports by discouraging complex compound sentences. The 2.6% margin was apparently chosen so the texts would match the readability of academic papers.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

Things

Jan. 16th, 2026 03:38 pm
vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)
[personal profile] vass
Books
So far this year (since January 1) I've read Margaret Killjoy's The Immortal Choir Holds Every Voice, listened to the audiobook of Alexandra Rowland's Running Close to the Wind, am reading Victoria Goddard's Plum Duff, and started Evelyn Araluen's The Rot.

Games
Quoting my own complaint elsewhere: the worst part of Hollow Knight is the runbacks. Each time my desktop switches itself off I need to turn it on again, restore my browser tabs and do other "just booted" chores, see what troubleshooting data I can get now, check what steps I can take next, then start the game again to find out whether whatever I tried this time worked. Then two minutes later my computer crashes.

Have also been doing Redactle and Squardle with [personal profile] kaberett, and cryptic crosswords with [personal profile] shehasathree.

Tech
As you may gather from the previous section of this post, I am having technical difficulties. So it goes.

Crafts
No active progress yet, but the yarn I ordered arrived. This is for weaving with my mother's old knitter's loom which she gave me for my birthday last year.

Actually, no, I'll share the complaints I emitted while trying to decide what yarn to order (huge thanks to Iphys on the Lays server for sorting me out on this.)

cut for length )

Garden
No ripe tomatoes yet, but they're still alive. Raspberry bush looking very sad indeed. Harvested a little bit of parsley and oregano for cooking purposes.

Cats
Didn't enjoy the hot weather last week. Neither did I.

Nature
Hot and windy. (This is an understatement. Last week there was a heatwave and my whole state, as well as those nearest it, was at either "extreme" or "catastrophic" fire danger. I was in one of the "extreme" parts, and unpleasantly aware that on the fire danger scale they use, "catastrophic" is 100 out of 100. Meaning, your area can be at 99 and yet not catastrophic.)

It cooled down after that, but summer is very much not over, and there are places all over the state that are still on fire.
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