laughing_tree: (Seaworth)
[personal profile] laughing_tree posting in [community profile] scans_daily
image host

Ryan was telling me, "Oh, we're going to do this scene in the Doom crossover book." And I was like, "I don't think Thor would say that." And Thor did kind of say that. And I was like, we have to kill Thor now, we have to kill him. I mean, he was being reborn anyway but now he's got to be reborn. -- Al Ewing

Read more... )

Cuddle Party

18 Mar 2026 12:05 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Everyone needs contact comfort sometimes. Not everyone has ample opportunities for this in facetime. So here is a chance for a cuddle party in cyberspace. Virtual cuddling can help people feel better.

We have a cuddle room that comes with fort cushions, fort frames, sheets for draping, and a weighted blanket. A nest full of colorful egg pillows sits in one corner. There is a basket of grooming brushes, hairbrushes, and styling combs. A bin holds textured pillows. There is a big basket of craft supplies along with art markers, coloring pages, and blank paper. The kitchen has a popcorn machine. Labels are available to mark dietary needs, recipe ingredients, and level of spiciness. Here is the bathroom, open to everyone. There is a lawn tent and an outdoor hot tub. Bathers should post a sign for nude or clothed activity. Come snuggle up!

Dune: Part Three [2026]

17 Mar 2026 09:57 pm
myrmidon: ([film;] do not trust her.)
[personal profile] myrmidon posting in [community profile] icons
Dune: Part Three (2026)
[ teaser trailer ]


[ here @ [community profile] axisandallies ]

Dune: Part Three [2026]

17 Mar 2026 09:55 pm
myrmidon: ([film;] do not trust her.)
[personal profile] myrmidon posting in [community profile] fandom_icons
Dune: Part Three (2026)
[ teaser trailer ]


[ here @ [community profile] axisandallies ]

jejune

18 Mar 2026 01:00 am
[syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 18, 2026 is:

jejune • \jih-JOON\  • adjective

Jejune is a formal word that means "uninteresting" or "boring." It is also used as a synonym of juvenile to describe things (such as behaviors, attitudes, etc.) that are immature, childish, or simplistic.

// The movie adaptation employed surreal visual effects to tell the story, making the plot, jejune in the novel, archetypal rather than artless.

// The professor made rude and jejune remarks about the students' artwork.

See the entry >

Examples:

"While [author Helen] Garner has journaled most of her life, she burned her early diaries in a bonfire having deemed them too embarrassing or jejune." — The Irish Times, 29 Mar. 2025

Did you know?

Starved for excitement? You won't get it from something jejune. The term comes to us from the Latin word jejunus, which means "empty of food," "hungry," or "meager." When English speakers first used jejune back in the 1600s, they applied it in ways that mirrored the meaning of its Latin parent, lamenting "jejune appetites" and "jejune morsels." Something that is meager rarely satisfies, and before long jejune was being used not only for meager meals or hunger, but also for things lacking in intellectual or emotional substance. It's possible that the word gained its now-popular "juvenile" or "childish" sense when people confused it with the look-alike French word jeune, which means "young."



current reading

17 Mar 2026 09:38 pm
thistleingrey: (Default)
[personal profile] thistleingrey
Uzma Jalaluddin, Detective Aunty (2025): when the landlord of her daughter's small clothing boutique is murdered, Kausar drops everything to go. Kausar's (white) friend feels sure that Kausar will find out what really happened. But her daughter wants help with housekeeping and child-minding, not an adult peer's support.

I'm only in ch. 3, I don't care currently whether books stick the landing (though I like this one so far), and ch. 2 is great for its tender forthrightness: when a kid (even a thirtysomething adult, like Kausar's daughter) is used to seeing a parent in a certain way, that's how the two are paused, unless the child makes an effort to grow a bit more. It's not something that the parent can shift solo.
[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…

1. My male coworker takes his family everywhere, and it makes him late for work events

I am a woman in STEM and have a coworker, Fergus, who has a stay-at-home-wife and a toddler. They currently live out-of-state with his in-laws, and when he travels — whether it’s to a conference, work event, or just an in-office event — he always brings his wife and kid.

This leads him to often not arriving to these events that start at 8 or 9 am until 11 or 12 because he went to brunch with the fam. My (male) boss finds it endearing, despite it often leaving the rest of us idle for hours waiting on him and often seems to overlook women in the office with children for projects.

This is weird, right? If I as a woman were to do it, it would seem distracting to the job and frowned upon, right? I am not being unreasonable here?

Yes, it’s weird. Not necessarily that he brings his wife and kid with him — some people find it easier to do that when they travel — but that he allows it to affect his availability for work during these trips, particularly during normal business hours, and it’s even odder that your boss is apparently fine with it. It’s particularly problematic that your boss seems to discriminate against women with kids, while having a different standard for a man with kids who is actively letting them affect his availability during work hours.

Any chance the rest of you want to speak up and say, “Could we ask Fergus to be here at 8 so we’re not waiting on him like has happened a lot previously?”

2. Is it normal for my desk to be really far away from the rest of my team?

I’m in my mid 30s and have been working full-time for over a decade, but after working in the arts for my whole career, I recently changed industries to something that’s more formal office-type work. When I was interviewing for this job, I made sure to ask as much as I could about office culture, but I didn’t think to ask where my desk would be, and I’m regretting that now.

My office is in the very back corner of the building, far away from everyone else. You basically have to have a map and answer three riddles to get to my office. I feel lucky that I have space to work (and even a window!), but I absolutely hate that I sit alone in my office all day. Is this normal? In my previous roles in arts organizations, even when my job was mostly desk-based, I never felt physically separated from the rest of my team like this. This was usually because there wasn’t enough space for everyone, but even if my office was around a corner, there were constantly reasons to be getting up and talking to my colleagues. On the (rare) occasions that I had an office to myself, everyone else was always close by.

Are people in office jobs really out here just sitting alone at a desk working all day? I feel so disconnected from my colleagues and my work, and I’ve never felt less motivated to do work. Is office/desk location worth asking about when interviewing? I know there are people who love working remotely, but I’ve always struggled with it because it felt isolating to me. But if most office jobs are sitting alone at a computer for most of the day anyway, then I certainly have a new appreciation for being remote, where I can at least hang out with my cat. But I’m seriously considering leaving, and while there are other significant reasons that this job isn’t working for me, the geography of where I’m working is definitely a major factor, so I want to be sure that where I go next doesn’t have the same issues. Is this the norm that I should be expecting? Should I ask about it in any interviews that I get?

It’s not the norm to be seated far away from the rest of your team (which is probably confirmed even in your own office by the fact that the rest of your team seems to be seated closer to each other). But there are certainly workplaces where it happens, often due to a shortage of space where they’d prefer to put you.

Have you talked to your manager about it and asked if there’s a way to sit closer to the rest of the team? You could explain that you feel isolated and would prefer to be in closer contact with people you work with. Who knows, maybe there are alternatives, especially if you’re willing to give up things like a window. It’s worth at least asking.

Otherwise, though, yes, you can ask what the office set-up is like when you’re interviewing. It’s something to save for closer to the end of the interview process, not in an initial phone screen, but you could certainly say something like, “I had a job where I sat really far away from the rest of my team, and I found that made it harder to collaborate. Can you tell me a little about what the office set-up is like for this team, and for this role in particular?”

3. We’re expected to donate a lot of money for gifts throughout the year

I need a gut check on gift giving on my team. We are a team of eight, including our manager. We typically each pitch in $5 for a gift card for everyone’s birthday, which costs around $35 each year. We also do a Christmas present for each team member, which is around $50 total. And then when someone is going through a hard time, like if their pet dies or they have an unexpected medical issue, we will pool another $5-$10 each to help out. So it costs about $100-$120 a year to be on our team.

Contributions are “voluntary,” but they are organized through our online chat platform so everyone can see if you’ve contributed or not. Some of us can definitely afford the cost, but there are people on the team who make a lower hourly wage, and none of us are getting raises this year. Also, I have a very rocky relationship with our manager and had to get HR involved to avoid retaliation around her birthday last year. And I still had to contribute $5 for her gift card and sign a card wishing her a happy birthday.

I am trying to make it work with my manager but she gets really enthusiastic about the gift giving and I find it off-putting. I’m not sure if that’s because of my past issues with her or because I’m starting to think that it costs too much to be on my team. Thoughts?

It’s more than off-putting; it’s unethical. It still happens with a surprising amount of regularity, but people shouldn’t be pressured to contribute their own personal money to have a job, or to be seen a full member of their team.

Whether it’s politically smart to do anything about it is a different issue. There might be room for a bunch of you to speak up and ask that the practice be curtailed — but since you have a rocky relationship with your manager and she apparently retaliated about something birthday-related last year, you probably shouldn’t be the one leading it.

4. We’re not paid for mandatory lunch meetings

We have a mandatory monthly staff meeting with lunch provided. Sometimes the meetings are more than an hour. Our meeting last week was less than 45 minutes. The purpose of the meetings varies. In theory, we are allowed some time to eat lunch before the staff meeting portion starts; however, last week, our boss started the meeting immediately. This meeting consisted mostly of us going around the room to introduce ourselves to a new employee. So, we all sat there for most of this time telling one person information that we already know about each other.

When we have these lunch meetings, for hourly employees like me, HR deducts 30 minutes from our paid work time as “lunch.” If hourly staff are short of 40 hours for the week, we are generally expected to use enough PTO to equal 40 hours.

I typically don’t take a lunch break, so my workdays are a straight eight hours. Yesterday, I double-checked my time for last week, and damn if I’m not 30 minutes short now because HR deducted 30 minutes for this lunch meeting. I would not otherwise be short. I will have to submit a request for 30 minutes of PTO if I want to be paid my full 40 hours. My alternative would have been to stay at work 30 minutes longer that day to make up the time deducted for this lunch meeting, which I would have done, but they waited until yesterday to deduct the time. Now I’m stuck using PTO for something I didn’t have a choice to do. If I had stayed later and they hadn’t deducted the time, I’d have overtime, and they don’t want that either.

Is it fair, reasonable, or legal to require hourly staff to attend a lunch meeting and then not pay them for that time? It seems petty at best to take this 30 minute deduction for hourly staff when the handful of salaried staff don’t have to worry about it. In addition, I have serious health issues that force me to be very mindful of my PTO, so losing 30 minutes for something like this makes life more difficult for me. I just can’t believe there isn’t a more reasonable option here.

Because the meetings are mandatory, it’s illegal for them to deduct that time from your paycheck. If they were truly optional, they could do it this way — but they’re mandatory and they’re about work, so you need to be paid for being there. Federal law, and probably your state laws too, make this very clear.

You could say this to your HR: “I recently learned that we can’t legally deduct lunch meetings from our hours if the meeting is mandatory. My understanding has always been that we’re required to attend, so can you fix the previous deductions from my check?”

This is going to be a big mess for them to fix retroactively — because adding back in that time means they’re also going to owe you overtime for any weeks where that will take you over 40 hours for the week — but legally they do need to fix it. That said, if you decide that’s more trouble to you than it’s worth, you could just ask them to fix the last one and anything going forward. But you’d be on solid legal ground in expecting them to fix it all.

Also, if your state is one that requires a lunch break after a certain number of hours (not all do; google the name of your state and “lunch break” to see if yours does), they need to give you one that’s separate from these mandatory meetings.

5. Interviewing while trans — when I previously met with the hiring manager before transitioning

I recently, very suddenly and unexpectedly, was laid off. I was not prepared at all for this as leadership had reassured us only two weeks before that the team would not be impacted. So I’m back on the job market after five years.

I’m finding a lot of the jobs I can apply to are at the same companies I interviewed with five years ago before I got my current role. Different positions, but with the same hiring managers listed and in the same divisions. Normally, if I’ve met with someone before in an interview, I will note it in my cover letter, especially with multiple rounds of interviews. Maybe they will remember, maybe they won’t, but if they liked me enough to bring me in three or four times, I want them to remember it.

But here’s the issue — I’m trans, and in the last five years I changed my name and began to transition. I currently look just like a butch lesbian, and my chosen name is plausibly gender neutral. I also use she/her pronouns in customer-facing roles because I’d rather not constantly correct people. But the name change and my obviously more masculine presentation is going to be noticeable — especially the name change, as it’s rare to change one’s first name like I did. Think changing your name from Katie to Ryan.

How would you recommend I handle this in cover letters and interviews? Should I not mention it at all and let them assume I’m a different person? Mention I met with them before and have since changed my name but not clarify details? My name change is not a secret — my resume lists a patent under my deadname with (under a prior name) next to it and I will tell a hiring manager it to use when verifying references — but I also don’t want to be “the transgender applicant” before they even read my resume.

If it matters in your answer, I live in Massachusetts and wouldn’t want to work for a transphobic company anyway. I’m less worried about not being hired because I’m trans, and more about when and how it is appropriate to mention this information.

In your cover letter, say something like this: “I interviewed with you in 2021 for the X position (I was Katie LastName then) and really enjoyed talking with you about ____.” That’s it!

The post my coworker takes his family everywhere, my desk is really far away from my team, and more appeared first on Ask a Manager.

ysabetwordsmith: (Fly Free)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This is today's freebie, inspired by a prompt from LJ user My_partner_doug.

Read more... )

Falling behind

17 Mar 2026 11:19 pm
cornerofmadness: (Default)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness
On commentary again. I see you. I appreciate you. Mid term grades are due tomorrow so I am overwhelmed. And annoyed. And I will be busier and busier as we go. At least 5 of the 7 students who missed the midterm before break showed up today and took their exam (we had like three sports teams out that week) one had a good excuse for coming tomorrow and the other (who happens to be the one who's been cheating) didn't bother to let me know what they're doing so someone is gonna be surprised tomorrow when grades go in


I did want to say a lot of you did respond to my question about those scenes that won't leave you alone. Most do what I do as well, write them out and even if you don't use them, it's out of your head. While I do this I don't do it enough and I think that is because I'm afraid if I do, the whole thing will go quiet. I've had that happen. That's a whole different set of problems.


I'm not feeling St Patrick's day so it is also St Gertrude of Nivelles day, the patroness of cats among other things so let's combine the day with Women's History and here's more about her.
Gertrude of Nivelles


for Fannish 50 let's have a talk.

Sarah Michelle Gellar Reveals The Real Cause Of The 'Buffy' Reboot Cancellation—And Fans Are Livid

I wasn't sure I was thrilled about the reboot but it grew on me the more I learned about it but can we as fans say how fucking tired we are of some exec making foolish choices based on their arrogance and feelings. Bragging how much you hated Buffy and didn't bother with it originally is not a good reason to make this choice.

Three seconds of research would show that 25 years later still has fans churning out a few dozen stories/art/articles practically daily. You're talking a rabid fan base ready for th is, not to mention a whole new generation of fans to woo. So Hulu is losing a ton of profit because of one man's ego. And this is not for the first time. We've seen this time and again, especially with these 25 y.o. male execs who seem to not understand their audiences at all.

The last time I was this infuriated was with Prodigal Son which Fox touted as it's number one show and then 1 episode from the end, cancels it taking everyone including the cast by surprise.

St. Patrick's Day

17 Mar 2026 10:39 pm
billroper: (Default)
[personal profile] billroper
We celebrated St. Patrick's Day by baking the corned beef that I picked up at Sam's Club this morning (on sale!). This is not the cheapest available corned beef, but I remember buying the Kroger brand corned beef one year at Mariano's and greatly regretting it. And it is a *lot* cheaper than the Vienna corned beef. :)

17 Mar 2026 11:36 pm
stardust_rifle: A cartoon-style image of of a fluffy brown cat sitting upright and reading a book, overlayed over a sparkly purple circle. (Default)
[personal profile] stardust_rifle
The funny thing about Arashi getting bodysnatched by the Female Fanon Ghost/Fanon Team Mom archetype in Fanon is that it’s not just bog-standard misogyny, it’s also partially because that’s how she intentionally presents herself, so it’s also a “ha, you have fallen for the character’s facade!” type of situation.

Vids Resurrected!

17 Mar 2026 10:55 pm
przed: (retro tv)
[personal profile] przed
Since I took my vids site down years ago and then had my vidding machine crash on me, my vids have been spread scattershot in various places. A few on YouTube. A few on the Internet Archive. Most MIA. But I was poking around the basement and finally found the disk backups of a lot of them, so I'm going to start putting them back online and up on AO3.

First two show the fully crazy range of my vidding: wacky hijinks to existential dread.

The wacky hijinks part is on display in the first one:

Pop a Boner

A multifandom vid using every instance of male nudity I could get my grubby little paws on.

The song is from the Zero Patience soundtrack. (Zero Patience is a Canadian musical about the alleged first AIDS patient. It's funny and uplifting and fuelled by furious outrage. You should watch it.)

And for existential dread, have a little Withnail and I:

The Fear

The song is by Pulp, and I used every moment of dread and depression in Withmail & I. (Withnail is a really funny movie with a high angst quotient, and I chose the angst over the humour for this one.)

This is the vid I'm possibly most proud of, and I'd feared it was lost forever, so I was so happy to find it in my disk backups.
rahirah: (su_editor)
[personal profile] rahirah posting in [community profile] su_herald
CONNOR: Cordy! Cordy!
CORDELIA: What?
CONNOR: Are you okay?
CORDELIA: Sure. Except for the morning sickness that can’t tell time.
CONNOR: Good. I mean, that you’re okay.
CORDELIA: Why wouldn’t I be?
CONNOR: Angelus. He was here again.
CORDELIA: Excuse me? (off his look; innocent) He was?
CONNOR: Downstairs. He caught Fred alone, used a fake charm. Fooled her long enough to take everything we had on whoever the Beast was working for.
CORDELIA: That son of a bitch…

~~Angel Season IV Episode #80: "Release"~~




[Drabbles & Short Fiction]

[Chaptered Fiction]


[Images, Audio & Video]


[Reviews & Recaps]


[Community Announcements]


[Fandom Discussions]


[Articles, Interviews, and Other News]


Submit a link to be included in the newsletter!

Join the editor team :)

quick hello-I'm-alive post

17 Mar 2026 10:41 pm
asakiyume: (feathers on the line)
[personal profile] asakiyume
It's been more than a week since I posted! Part of that's just life being busy; part is that [personal profile] osprey_archer is here!

Today we went to Bright Water Bog, swung on a swing, ate some cranberries, and saw ice forming. It was sunny, but a cold wind was blowing, and a few flurries of snow came down.



(We also went to the Smith College Botanical Gardens, but this is a drive-by post! So there's only the one photo.)

Weekly reading (etc.)

17 Mar 2026 10:09 pm
troisoiseaux: (fumi yanagimoto)
[personal profile] troisoiseaux
Read The Stranger by Albert Camus and spent the entire time thinking about the Ben Affleck smoking meme, or perhaps a little cartoon man smoking a cigarette and muttering bah in a French accent, which is to say I had a deeply unserious reading experience. I found this book to be surprisingly (darkly) funny, because the main character/narrator, Meursault, just floats through life— including his own trial and forthcoming execution for murder— by responding to everyone and everything with abrupt and odd statements about how nothing matters, actually. Promotion at work? It's all the same to him; nothing matters. His girlfriend wants to get married? Sure, if she wants to; it's not like anything matters. The blurb describes this as the "story of an ordinary man who unwittingly gets drawn into a senseless murder on a sundrenched Algerian beach," which led me to expect that Meursault would be an accessory to murder, or perhaps framed for a crime he didn't commit— especially as, early on, a shady acquaintance has him (Meursault) write a threatening letter to his (the acquaintance's) ex— but no?? He literally just shoots a random guy multiple times at close range for no reason?? Because Life Is Absurd And Nothing Matters, Actually????

In a rare (and only very, very loosely book-adjacent) movie update, I saw The Bride! (2026, dir. Maggie Gyllenhaal) last weekend and it was SO much fun. It is not a particularly coherent movie— it does feel like a sort of Frankenstein's monster in itself, cobbled from about three different premises ("what if Bride of Frankenstein was Bonnie & Clyde?"; "Frankenstein 2: Mary's Revenge, A Feminist Retelling", etc.)— but as a fan of campy horror and classic Hollywood I felt incredibly catered to. I also watched National Theatre's Ncuti Gatwa-led The Importance of Being Earnest, which is in fact as absolutely delightful as it looks. (It's available on YouTube through tomorrow, the 18th, and streaming on National Theatre at Home after that.)

17 Mar 2026 09:52 pm
watersword: A compass and the words "a compass that doesn't point north" (Pirates of the Caribbean: compass)
[personal profile] watersword

Oh my GOD can it be spring yet, I am SO TIRED OF WINTER. There is a tiny tiny tiny pink nubbin of rhubarb in the garden. No asparagus yet. I cannot wait to get the dopamine hit of seeing my summer clothes for the first time in months.

The NT's production of The Importance of Being Earnest is of course a delight (Sharon D. Clarke deserves a knighthood and Ncuti Gatwa wears clothes, and few clothes, to perfection); [profile] velveteenrabbi and D's Pesach class is as excellent as one might expect; somewhere on this desk is an embroidery needle and I am convinced the gherkin is going to stab herself with it. Wednesday is actually largely unscheduled and I need only survive the conference Thursday, which requires me to leave the house at godawful o'clock.

I am looking forward to the three-hour train ride and the Dessa concert so much. And then I get a weekend in my favorite city! I have been promised brunch and a museum and rainbow cookies and bagels. (Promised by myself and I intend to follow through in every particular.)

17 Mar 2026 06:47 pm
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
* There is talk of letting 19 years olds from Canadian juniors play in the AHL. They should be allowed to go AHL as soon as they are drafted. Otherwise, franchises have to put baby rookies on NHL ice or not be able to develop them. This isn't the biggest issue in hockey, but how this intra-league weirdness is currently feeds into / causes / etc a lot of problems so I really want to see this changed.

* Also, randomly since I am hockey posting... There are identical mirror twins in the upcoming draft and it's not impossible they wind up on the same team. I think it's Vancouver who has the right combo of picks to get them? Imagine the drama if a team goes for a matched set of very practiced line mates and someone snipes the other brother.

Accounting.

17 Mar 2026 09:09 pm
hannah: (Laundry jam - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
Time I would've spent writing this evening was spent on cooking risotto for lunch and filling out tax forms as best I could. I opened the document and poked at it a bit to feel something and say I'd at least poked at it, and that helped me relax from the taxes enough I can think about doing something else with the night. Not much, but something else.

It's probably just going to be a couple days' of Stardew Valley, though.

Backup, Finally

17 Mar 2026 06:15 pm
lovelyangel: (Eve Angel)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Carbon Copy Cloner 7 Task Window
Carbon Copy Cloner 7 Task Window

Just before I went to bed last night I decided I needed to (finally) figure out how I was going to keep a local backup of my Lightroom photos and catalog. I put the task on the list for Tuesday (today).

Backup Geekery, Below This Cut )

feeder action

17 Mar 2026 07:55 pm
low_delta: (Default)
[personal profile] low_delta posting in [community profile] birdfeeding
We've had a lot of activity at the feeders both before and after the snowstorm.

Today I noticed:
A small flock of grackles. Usually there are only one or two, and with other blackbirds or starlings.
A red-breasted nuthatch. They are rare visitors to the yard, and had never seen one in the winter.
A song sparrow. Common though nondescript birds, and I'd never actually ID'd one before.
A red-bellied woodpecker. Common around here, but I only recently started using feed with nuts again.
Enough snow had melted in the back yard that the robins were back on the grass.

Still more juncos on the sock than finches. I think I saw a goldfinch at the column feeder. Red-winged blackbirds have been coming around for the last week or so, but the never stay long. Other than that, it was the usual assortment of house finches, cardinals, chickadees and mourning doves.
burnhername: Faith pic with the word editor (SH editor Faith)
[personal profile] burnhername posting in [community profile] su_herald
JOYCE: (faces Buffy again) We got a very exciting shipment in at the Gallery. (glances around the room) I, um, thought I'd hang a few pieces in here.
JOYCE: It cheers up the room.
BUFFY: (looking at the mask) It's angry at the room, Mom. It wants the room to suffer.

~~Dead Man's Party~~


We are having an issue with our feeds and are hoping to fix it soon.


[Drabbles & Short Fiction]


[Chaptered Fiction]


[Images, Audio & Video]


[Reviews & Recaps]


[Recs & In Search Of]


[Community Announcements]


[Fandom Discussions]


[Articles, Interviews, and Other News]


Submit a link to be included in the newsletter!

Join the editor team :)

17 Mar 2026 05:28 pm
lycomingst: (Default)
[personal profile] lycomingst
Today was the first day I went to the store without wearing a jacket. The trees are agog with Spring. The ants have returned from wherever they were wintering.

Daily Check-In

17 Mar 2026 05:59 pm
starwatcher: Western windmill, clouds in background, trees around base. (Default)
[personal profile] starwatcher posting in [community profile] fandom_checkin
 
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Tuesday, March 17, to midnight on Wednesday, March 18. (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #34381 Daily Check-in
This poll is closed.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 28

How are you doing?

I am OK.
17 (60.7%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now.
11 (39.3%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single.
12 (42.9%)

One other person.
12 (42.9%)

More than one other person.
4 (14.3%)




Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
 
burnhername: Faith pic with the word editor (SH editor Faith)
[personal profile] burnhername posting in [community profile] su_herald

We have changed our tag for the Hulu Sequel that was not picked up, which was named New Sunnydale. Previously the tag was "Hulu Sequel" but now we are tagging it "Hulu Pilot". (If it had been picked up and named New Sunnydale, that would have become the new fandom tag.) Our other fandom tags include: btvs, ats, buffy comics, slayers: a buffyverse story - to name some but not all. See the full list on our tags page.

Reblogs of "hulu sequel" have been changed to "hulu pilot" for the Digest. We will be updating our tags page soon.

There have been a lot of posts about the Pilot not getting picked up. A double Herald covering Sunday and Monday is delayed, but will be released sometime Tuesday (US time). It will include a lot of posts about the pilot. These will be labeled so you can read or avoid them as you like.

We anticipate this surge of activity about the pilot to die down at some point. Perhaps it will lead to more new viewers watching the original show (or movie). Perhaps it will lead to more fan art, fan videos, and fan fiction as people channel their pilot hopes and dreams into creative fanworks. We will see, and continue to document it in the Herald Newsletter.

As always, if you are interested in joining the crew that puts out one of the longest running (since 2004) fandom newsletters, reach out. We can always use a backup editor or more tumblr rebloggers.

Our contact info is available in the tumblr sidebar and LiveJournal/Dreamwidth profile as always. You can also comment on this post. Cheers!

- burnhername

Cautiously optimistic forecast

17 Mar 2026 11:44 pm
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

It looks like the temperature may reach the high teens tomorrow, and with plenty of sunshine too. If that proves to be accurate, it might be the first day of the year when I can reasonably use the word warm instead of simply mild. I did have a cup of coffee in the pub's beer garden this morning and it was okay, but I had a coat on. Tomorrow I have too many boring things to do to have time for a pub break, but I doubt I'll need a coat at all. :)
burnhername: Faith pic with the word editor (SH editor Faith)
[personal profile] burnhername posting in [community profile] su_herald
ENJOY THIS SPECIAL HAND CRAFTED BONUS NEWSLETTER FOCUSED ONLY ON HULU PILOT DISCUSSION FROM REDDIT AND TUMBLR.
Note that most tumblr posts have a discussion in the replies.




[Fandom Discussions]


Submit a link to be included in the newsletter!

Join the editor team :)

Media Post

17 Mar 2026 07:01 pm
inchoatewords: a drawn caricature of the journal user, a brown-haired woman with glasses in a blue shirt, smiling at the viewer (Default)
[personal profile] inchoatewords
Movies: None. Really need to get on that AFI list!

Television/Streaming: the recent episodes of Taskmaster New Zealand. It's a fun group. Also a couple of episodes of Buffy, season 3: "Revelations" and "Lovers Walk." I'm not completely sold on Faith at this point; sometimes she annoys me. I'm happy Spike is back. Is he a dick? Yes. But I do enjoy him as a character.

Books: I read Sing Unburied Sing by Jessmyn Ward for our DEI book club at work. Ward has been on my list for a while, and I can see why her books have won awards. The writing was really good, and I thought the atmosphere of the place/time was well-done (rural Mississippi). There is a LOT to unpack here about family, and the impacts of racism, and poverty, and drugs, and there might be a little TOO much going on in the plot and that muddies things a bit. The book is told in mulitple points of view, and while that can be well-done, you have to make sure the voices are distinct enough. JoJo, the young boy in this story, sounds a lot like his mother, Leonie, and that was confusing. There were some good elements here, though, and I'm sure we'll have a lot to discuss at book club.

I did not finish The Sirens by Emilia Hart for my other book club. I got about 20% in before I could not read anymore. The motivations of the main character did not make any sense to me and she did not seem relatable at all. That doesn't always have to be the case, but also, if you are going to make some weird choices, you have to find a way to explain why the character would do those. (For example, the main character here is a journalism student and loves investigating things; yet, when confronted with a situation where asking some questions would absolutely be the thing to do, she just . . . doesn't. She stays put and cleans the apartment instead. The fuck)?

I'm currently reading An Offer from a Gentleman by Julia Quinn, as we just finished the Bridgerton season it's based on. They have changed some things and these books are ridiculous but I wanted a little bit of fluffy stuff in between other books.

Video Games: Playing Bendy and the Ink Machine. It's been occasionally frustrating when I get lost, haha. I love the art style, though. And the "cartoony horror" is not that bad, a few jumpscares of creepy things.

Listening to: Moving on with the Rolling Stone Top 500 albums, I listened to Black Flag's Damaged, number 487 on the list. This album was number 340 on the 2012 list. Rolling Stone blurb:
MCA refused to release this album, denouncing it as “immoral” and “anti-parent.” High praise, but Black Flag lived up to it, defining L.A. hardcore punk with Greg Ginn’s violent guitar and the pissed-off scream of Henry Rollins, especially on “TV Party” and “Rise Above,” which came with the timeless smash-the-glass salvo “We are tired of your abuse/Try to stop is but it’s no use.” Punks still listen to Damaged, and parents still hate it.

This is not really my style of music. Most of these songs blended into each other for me, but I did like "TV Party" and I can see why this album is a seminal work for this genre.
[syndicated profile] wtfjht_feed

Posted by Matt Kiser

Day 1883

Today in one sentence: Trump said NATO “is making a very foolish mistake” by refusing to join the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran; Trump – twice – said that a former president told him he wished he’d been the one to attack Iran, but all four living former presidents denied talking to Trump about Iran; the top U.S. counterterrorism official resigned over the Iran war, saying Iran posed “no imminent threat”; the Senate voted 51-48 to open debate on the House-passed SAVE America Act; and the House Oversight Committee subpoenaed Attorney General Pam Bondi to appear for a closed-door deposition over the Justice Department’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein investigation and its compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act.


1/ Trump said NATO “is making a very foolish mistake” by refusing to join the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran, while calling it “a great test, because we don’t need them.” He also insisted that “all of the NATO allies agreed with us” on confronting Iran, but that NATO had become “a one-way street” in which “we will protect them, but they will do nothing for us, in particular, in a time of need.” Trump also said he was “not afraid” to put U.S. troops on the ground in Iran, adding: “I’m really not afraid of anything.” (Politico / Wall Street Journal / New York Times / Bloomberg / Reuters / CNBC / Axios / Associated Press)

2/ Trump – twice – said that a former president told him he wished he’d been the one to attack Iran, but all four living former presidents denied talking to Trump about Iran. Representatives for Bush, Clinton, Obama, and Biden said they hadn’t spoken with Trump recently. Nevertheless, Trump first made the claim at a White House meeting with Kennedy Center board members, then repeated it in the Oval Office, saying, “I spoke to one of the former presidents” and that the person told him, “I wish I did what you did.” When asked who it was, Trump ruled out Bush, wouldn’t say whether it was Clinton, and said he didn’t want to identify the person because “I don’t want to get him into trouble.” (NBC News / New York Times / Associated Press / The Hill / The Guardian)

3/ The top U.S. counterterrorism official resigned over the Iran war, saying Iran posed “no imminent threat.” In his resignation letter, Joe Kent, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, said: “I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran. Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby.” Kent claimed Israel “deployed a misinformation campaign,” which “sowed pro-war sentiments to encourage a war with Iran,” and “was used to deceive you into believing that Iran posed an imminent threat to the United States, and that should you strike now.” In response, Trump said Kent was a nice guy, who “was weak on security, very weak on security.” Kent is the first senior Trump administration official to publicly quit over the conflict. (Axios / Wall Street Journal / NPR / Politico / Washington Post / Reuters / CNBC / NBC News / Bloomberg / New York Times / Associated Press)

4/ The Senate voted 51-48 to open debate on the House-passed SAVE America Act, launching what Republicans said could be days of floor speeches on Trump’s “No. 1 priority.” The measure would require proof of citizenship to register and photo ID to vote, but Senate Republicans lack the 60 votes needed to break a Democratic filibuster. Senate Majority Leader John Thune also said that “the votes aren’t there” for the more aggressive talking-filibuster strategy. Democrats called the measure “a naked attempt to rig our elections” and vowed to block it “all day, all night.” (Politico / NBC News / Washington Post / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / CBS News / The Hill)

5/ The House Oversight Committee subpoenaed Attorney General Pam Bondi to appear for a closed-door deposition over the Justice Department’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein investigation and its compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The move followed a bipartisan committee vote earlier this month, when five Republicans joined Democrats to compel her testimony. Chairman James Comer said the panel has questions about possible mismanagement of the Epstein probe and Bondi’s role in collecting, reviewing, and releasing the files. The Justice Department called the subpoena “completely unnecessary,” and said Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche would brief committee members Wednesday, and didn’t say whether Bondi would comply. (New York Times / Washington Post / Politico / CNN / CNBC)

The 2026 midterms are in 231 days; the 2028 presidential election is in 966 days.



Support today’s essential newsletter and resist the daily shock and awe: Become a member

Subscribe: Get the Daily Update in your inbox for free

yet more of these drabbles

18 Mar 2026 09:55 am
deird1: Faith, with text " 'sup, bitches?" (Faith bitches)
[personal profile] deird1
This is for my urban fantasy setting, previously seen here and here.

Slowly but surely, I seem to be doing a thing…

drabbles! )
shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
1. Came home, did the exercises. general state of health )

2. Oh as an aside on PT and knee/hip/leg issues? The ballerina in the Sinner's number at the Oscars - who did a split with one leg up in the air and other bent beneath her? She had hip replacement surgery about three months prior.

"Just weeks before the Oscars, Copeland had undergone hip replacement surgery to address various injuries from her decorated ballet career, including bone spurs and cartilage loss. Despite this, she was determined to be a part of the Sinners performance, which allowed her to step back on pointe and join the celebration of the film's success, including Michael B. Jordan's Oscar win for Best Actor."

In December 2025, Copeland underwent hip replacement surgery.
On March 16, 2026, Copeland appeared on stage during the Oscars performance of "I Lied To You" from Sinners."

https://nationaltoday.com/us/ca/los-angeles/news/2026/03/17/misty-copeland-joins-sinners-oscars-performance-after-hip-surgery/

3. Commute is irritating me - Read more... )

4. Work is also irritating me. Read more... )

5. Is this journaling or venting, I can't tell? Well at least it's mostly under a cut?

6. Stumbled upon the Florence + The Machine Song that references Buffy S6, finally. [Take that Christopher Golden (who told Charisma Carpenter in her podcast that he disliked S6 and thought the characters were Out of Character or OTT (?) - which probably explains why I found his Buffy novels unreadable and never bothered with them (I tried them in the book stores and gave up)) and all the other naysayers. (What can I say? Except that the Buffy fandom is a contentious and fractious one. Most are, actually. People rarely agree on anything - even the things they love - so this is hardly surprising? ) ]

The song is entitled "This Old Religion" - and I'd not really listened to it before today. I actually love it - it's a good song.
This Old Religion )

Here's the lyric:
Read more... )

6. Regarding Buffy - apparently they not only filmed the pilot, they even reworked the script when Hulu wasn't satisfied with it, and made the show more adult and more centered on the character of Buffy.

I'm fascinated with this - because it shows how impossible it is to get good television shows on the air. Crap is easy. But a good television show is really hard to put out there - you have to get around the network. And sci-fantasy is really hard because it is so expensive to produce. Why? They are looking for a sure-thing, so go by market analysis and logarithms and statistical data. Demographics. They used to do focus groups - and select a group to view something.

The way Hulu handled the Buffy revival and dealt with the creators involved - reminds me of my own experiences with the publishing industry Read more... )

And Gellar's comment about the executive at Hulu who disliked Buffy and bragged about never watching it - makes me want to drop my Hulu subscription. (I won't - I watch too much on it at the moment.)Read more... ) The problem with our society is too many of the wrong people have all the power. That said? I like the New Mayor of NYC so far - he's coming across as a genuinely kind human being and proactive in his efforts to help all New Yorkers.

Chloe Zhao is less angry than Gellar - but Zhao has had different experiences having her hopes dashed and struggling with the corporate animal. (Zhao has had more luck than Gellar overall.) Read more... )

I know most of the folks who stumble across this - couldn't care less about the Buffy revival or Buffy. Depressing that. I miss the Buffy fandom. But alas, it scampered elsewhere. Mostly on Tumblr, Ticktock, Bluesky, Twitter, and Facebook. And that's not the fandom that I miss. I miss the one that analyzed the show, discussed things to death, and on occasion, not often, wrote fanfic.

7. I've joined then left a private group site on FB. "What to Do in NY" - I finally jumped out of. I decided its a tourist group site that exists solely to annoy the heck out of New Yorker's. (It's painful at times living in a highly frequented Tourist destination.) People would post, and all of the NY Residents on the site, myself included, would be compelled to state - no, no, you idiot, don't do that. Or yes, that's fine, stop worrying. Or for heaven's sake - if you are that concerned, just stay home, NY will eat you alive.

examples of what not to ask - well if you don't want to annoy New Yorkers )
So, I finally gave up and left.

2026 Snowflake Challenge #3

17 Mar 2026 03:13 pm
spiralicious: Cereal Killer Mask (Default)
[personal profile] spiralicious
Today’s challenge is a chance to express your love to fandom, and what better way than a love letter? If you feel really creative, the letter doesn’t have to come from you. You could write as your favourite character, someone completely fictitious or your past or future self - or just as you in this moment.

Write a love letter to fandom. It might be to fandom in general, to a particular fandom, favourite character, anything at all.



Dear Fandom,

Over the years, we've been through a lot; changes in platforms, media types, etiquette & norms, and terminology, to name a few. We've lost and gained friends. You were there during my darkest hours and you've been there for my biggest triumphs. And we've definitely had our issues from time to time over the last few decades, but I'll always be grateful you're in my life.

Yours always,

Kat/Spiralicious

An old-fashioned ornament of two young girls bundled up in coats and walking side by side is nestled amidst pine boughs.

Assisted dying bill Scotland

17 Mar 2026 10:14 pm
vivdunstan: Photo of me from Melrose Grammar School plus NHS thanks (nhs)
[personal profile] vivdunstan
Very sad to see the Scottish assisted dying bill voted against. Thinking of my dad tonight, and those like him, who suffered cruel and prolonged deaths from terminal disease, with totally inadequate palliative care, and would have dearly liked the option of assisted dying legislation.

And I find it really hard to read people posting about making life worth living instead. My dad died of pulmonary fibrosis, suffocating to death over two years hooked up permanently to oxygen. The last few months were agonising. People saying this haven't a clue how much some suffer. It is so cruel.

17 Mar 2026 05:29 pm
flemmings: (Default)
[personal profile] flemmings
In more 'cast not a clout till May be out' news, I had to dive into the futon storage drawer and retrieve my fleece trousers against today's minus 16C/4F wind chill. Also heaviest winter coat and mismatched fleece gloves because cold cold so cold. Tomorrow will get up to O, aka freezing, and if the wind drops, feel like spring.

Surpassed myself in the losing stuff in the bed dep't yesterday. So I brought one of my two wraps downstairs for sofa sitting, then brought it back up to join its fellow in the bedroom. Which wasn't there. I have a habit of flinging my beanbags from me when I pull the covers off to do my exercises so I carefully unwrapped the duvet and blanket and terry sheet, and it wasn't there. Checked the far side of the bed, moving the pillows and such I have stacked there, and it wasn't there. Shifted bed, looked under same on all sides, found a tennis ball but no wraps. Checked between head of bed and mattress and it wasn't there. Did I take it downstairs and forget about it? No, I only took one down along with my laundry. That wrap had glitched in the matrix into non-existence. Decided not to worry about it and went fretfully to sleep. Until this morning when I took my breakfast down to the study and there was my wrap on the table, exactly where I'd left it yesterday after ordering a new one. Ginkgo biloba cannot contend against aged brain fog. Mindfulness, mindfulness, mindfulness.

Journey of a Novel, Part Two

17 Mar 2026 02:19 pm
jreynoldsward: (Default)
[personal profile] jreynoldsward

When I start building a world and the plot of a book, things don’t always go quickly. In some cases I can visualize a whole world and start writing right away. But those instances tend to be rare, simply because these days what I’m working on are often notions that I’ve been thinking about and poking at for a couple of decades or so.

That’s the case for Vortex Worlds. I’ve approached it from several angles and been thinking about it for a very long time. The notion of a time/multiverse refuge in a quasi-Western, nineteenth-kinda century setting has been niggling at me ever since the early twenty-teens, when we were driving through the southern Willamette Valley. I got a flash of native elders confronting a white settler using a forbidden mechanical sickle bar mower—and turning into wicker/wooden forms in that field when the settler refused to comply.

Only then I wasn’t thinking about the time-travel multiverse elements. Those crawled slowly into my story notions as I worked on what eventually became the novella Bearing Witness. And even then, the concept really hasn’t gained flesh until recently.

What happened between now and then?

A lot of research. I also had a notion for an alternate history version of Pacific Northwest settlement by white Europeans that was loosely based on a proposal by Dr. John McLoughlin toward the end of his tenure as the Chief Factor for Fort Vancouver. McLoughlin approached the first US settlers with an idea of establishing an “Oregon Country,” independent from both the US and Great Britain.

Well, we know how that turned out.

However, I kept throwing magic and unicorns and other stuff into the mix, and gave up on it after a few short stories in that world. I…still might do something with it, unconnected to Vortex Worlds, but that makes it maybe next up on the list (we’ll see if Vision of Alliance’s sluggish sales perk up, that might be enough for me to turn to Book Two of that trilogy).

Anyway. Back to Vortex Worlds. One of the theories teasing at my brain has been this “what if Alice Clarissa Whitman had not drowned at age two?” notion. She was the daughter of early missionaries Marcus and Narcissa Whitman, born early in their time at Waíilatpu near what later became the city of Walla Walla. Her parents withdrew significantly from their mission after her death, and turned instead to helping US settlers instead of missionizing the local peoples for Christianity. It’s a possible turning point in history because Alice Clarissa was friendly with the Cayuse peoples; loved as the first white child born in their land. She spoke their language as well as English. Would she have suffered the same fate as her parents? Would she have died of measles? Or would she have ended up like a couple of orphaned girls who were adopted by the Whitmans, then orphaned a second time by their deaths, doomed to bouncing between so-called “adoptive” parents who basically treated them like indentured servants, up until they married?

Not that Alice Clarissa became a part of this world until recently. Before then, when I was drafting Bearing Witness, I was thinking more about a different path, where horrific nasty supernatural stuff tied to a multiverse and a battle for the control of the multiverse made the leadup to the US Civil War even bloodier and more awful. I visualized a group of escapees from the mid-nineteenth century bouncing from universe to universe, trying to escape the Soulers who not only killed the body but devoured the soul. Of course, not all of them were in political accord, which led to the opening that provided the foundation for the story of Bearing Witness, which I ended up serializing on Kindle Vella, then releasing as a novella a few years ago.

Even then, though, I buried seeds of a bigger world in Witness. Jesse Pruitt and his wife Tianawis—and Tianawis is head of the Kalosin Council of Women, the native people who control and protect the Kalosin refuge. Jesse is a Wild Colonist, a magician with the ability to manipulate the portals that transport people through the multiverse. Wild Colonists operate separately from the other two sources of magic—Federal Magicians and Preacher Magicians. Wild Colonists are independent wild cards—along with the Kalosin people.

Buried even deeper in Witness is the story of Jesse’s mother Abigail Caine Pruitt, who operates a null site within Kalosin. I don’t delve further into that part of the world in Witness, but I knew that Abigail’s story was significant.

Well, now it’s time for that piece. However, at the same time, I also had Alice Clarissa. I wrote a short story where a clone is substituted for her two-year-old drowned self, and she is raised by aliens and trained to be a Time Corps interpreter. Oh, I sent the story out to a couple of markets, but…it wasn’t that well-received, probably in part because I was still struggling with what this would turn Alice Clarissa into.

I’ve figured that piece out, and am revising that short story into something that’s much better than the original piece. This appears to be one of those books where the worldbuilding foundation ends up resting on assorted short stories, so writing these stories is part of that overall revision. Not sure yet whether these backstory short pieces will become a part of the book or if I’ll end up putting them out as related short stories as teasers/reader magnets.

Interestingly, instead of what I’ve done for worldbuilding in the past, I’m exploring this world through related short stories/outtakes. It’s something I started doing with the Martinieres and—well, for me it’s a sign that the world is starting to come to life. It’s a much slower process than sitting down with an easel and scribbling out notes to myself but—life is chaotic at the moment, so this slower process seems to fit what I’m doing.

Kalosin is a fascinating world, and I have oh-so-much to learn about it yet. Especially given its solitary status in the multiverse of Vortex Worlds. I’m nowhere near ready to start writing a chapter synopsis yet, but…it will happen. Eventually. After over thirty-two books to my credit, I’ve learned to trust the process. Sometimes it comes fast, other times it comes slow.

But the story eventually arrives. And I’m fascinated by this journey.

Right now I’m promoting a bundle on Itch that features several of my women characters with agency. If you haven’t read my work before, it’s a good introduction to several of my series. $18.90 for ten books, or 50% off of individual books. Check it out!

https://itch.io/s/181380/joyces-womens-history-month-special-sampler


Ghosts of Meier & Frank

17 Mar 2026 01:56 pm
lovelyangel: (Haruhi Thoughtful)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Meier & Frank Garment Bags
Meier & Frank Garment Bags

I’ve been working in the garage, trying to identify old stuff to get rid of (to make space for other stuff). There was a box of garment bags, and I figured I didn’t need those bags anymore. And then I realized I might have a use for a couple of bags – so I opened the box. Old garment bags, indeed.

It was with a wave of nostalgia that I unfolded two Meier & Frank garment bags. These bags were provided for free when I bought some dresses at the department store. I think I still have the dresses, as well.

Meier & Frank was erased as a brand – and converted to Macy’s – in 2006. I can’t believe Meier & Frank vanished 20 years ago. Has it really been that long? I grew up with the department store and have a lot of fond memories. (Like... the air doors at the Lloyd Center... and the escalators at the flagship store downtown... plus the restaurants... and the Christmas displays.) I walk through Macy’s all the time – but I still miss Meier & Frank – a lot.

This is what it means to be an old Oregonian. (Yesterday, I was telling my friend Debbie about growing up with Miller Paint in Portland. I could go on and on... U.S National Bank of Oregon... Alpenrose Dairy... J. K. Gill... Hung Far Low...)

Can I really let go of these garment bags?

17 Mar 2026 08:46 pm
beccaelizabeth: my Watcher tattoo in blue, plus Be in red Buffy style font (Default)
[personal profile] beccaelizabeth
Unexpected update: tumblr unbroke itself.
Staff undid the update.
Unusual wisdom.

Spring migrants

17 Mar 2026 07:04 pm
shewhomust: (Default)
[personal profile] shewhomust
It must be the season when visitors head north. Next week D. will be with us, just for a break and catching up - with us and other friends in the north. And we have just had a flying visit from [personal profile] helenraven, on her way even further north to a family celebration.

We took her to lunch at our favourite wine bar: a little nervously, because what makes it our favourite is not that the food and the wine are superlative - both are good but not stunning. [personal profile] helenraven is a person of taste and discernment, and I was afraid they might not meet her standards. But being a person of taste and discernment, she enjoyed the ambiance, the friendly service, the good food, the opportunity to have fun with wine - and besides, we had so much talking to do that [personal profile] durham_rambler had to prod me and ask, wasn't I going to take a picture?

Quattro rossi


All three of us opted for one of the flights of wine on offer: mine, as you see, were the four reds, [personal profile] helenraven had the 'family flight' from the business's own vineyard, and that lightweight [personal profile] durham_rambler chose a platter of nibbles with only three glasses of wine. That's an impresive eleven glasses on the table (there was some duplication, but not much).

We came home via Collected Books, where I was good, and just bought some cards, and via the North Road, which is looking terribly down at heel, and not just because of the Bus Station, where building work is still in progress (not that it does seem to progress) and where the usual handful of police cards were in attendance. And spent the rest of the day and much of the morning after, catching up - with breaks for reading when all this socialising got too much for us.

Circling back to this guy...

17 Mar 2026 03:53 pm
kiya: (feri)
[personal profile] kiya

Watcher



They say angels
Are genderless
But he refused to come
Unarmed:

He tore an eye
From his feathered wing
And opened its color
To paint his lids

He had not been shaped
To have
A blade
So he made one.

His hands opened
With gifts:

These are your weapons,
Use them.
Become strong
And beautiful.

Birdfeeding

17 Mar 2026 02:53 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] birdfeeding
Today is cloudy and cold.  At least the howling wind stopped.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a few sparrows and house finches.

I put out water for the birds.

Many of the plants that were sprouting have died from the hard freeze.  :/  Some still look fine though.  At least some of the sprouts in my jug and tub greenhouses have survived.

EDIT 3/17/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 3/17/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I've seen a large flock of sparrows and two male cardinals.

EDIT 3/17/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I am done for the night. 

The Big Idea: J. M. Sidorova

17 Mar 2026 07:20 pm
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by Athena Scalzi

How is it that fairy tales persist? In the Big Idea for The Witch of Prague, author J.M. Sidorova suggests that it might be because they are malleable and can be made to fit more times and places than just their own. To what use has the author put them here? Read on.

J. M. SIDOROVA:

When I think about a Big Idea of a novel, what comes to my mind first is more of a premise, an inceptive sprout from which the novel had grown. In this regard, The Witch of Prague grew out of a common fairy-tale archetype: an old hag gives a magic gift/poison apple to a young girl; think Sleeping beauty, forests, and castles. Except in this case, the archetype was invoked by true stories my Mom had told me about her young adulthood.

Thus, forests became the Cold War era Eastern European bureaucracies, castles became government departments, and the relationship between the hag and the young girl became complicated, as I, in the act of reimagining the fairy tale, subverted the heck out of it.

That said, this novel took a long time to become what it is now; it evolved in fits and starts while a sizeable chunk of my life was going by and the world was changing, and as a result it became a repository of symbolic representations for the ideas that are not new but have been important for me to unpack and highlight.

There is the Hunt of a Unicorn that, historically, fronts a host of contradictory ideas about power asymmetries between women and men; and then there is a Stag Hunt, which, as an example of a game of trust (or, more broadly, public goods game theory, like it’s better known cousin, the prisoner’s dilemma), stands for a balance of trust/cooperation vs. predation/competition in a given society.

There is also the Orwellian idea that authoritarian regimes not just restrict speech and writing, but, far more insidiously, they warp the very meaning, usage, and purpose of words, of the language itself. My main character, Alica, who’s grown up with mild dyslexia, is primed against such shenanigans because she’s always thought words were treacherous and out to get her, and one of her ways of fighting back was to invent an imaginary friend, a live typewriter with spider legs and word-swatting pincers.

So many different symbols, in other words, that at some point even I, their compulsive collector, felt that it was too much. And my awesome editors, Rachel Sobel and Huw Evans of Homeward Books, were of the same opinion: wait, is the Stag the same as the Unicorn or not? Author, explain thyself! So I went on an editing rampage, and I think I fixed things, and now all symbols are there to serve the story. 

But the big — or at any rate the permeating — idea that I would like to foreground since we are talking speculative fiction here, is what constitutes magic in this book. I think if one creates an alternative, fully magic-enabled reality for one’s tales, one can give a reader an escape, a full-on suspension of disbelief and all that, and that is fine. But if one instead injects bits of fantastical or magical into our viscerally recognizable reality, one gives a yearning, gives flickering moments of disassociation, of belief, “what if it were real?” It’s like magic comes to you, instead of you taking a vacation to go see magic.

And of course, so many works of speculative fiction do one approach or the other or anything in between. I personally, prefer the latter end of the spectrum over the former. So, what I was trying to do in The Witch of Prague was to have seemingly small, tenuous even amounts of magic within a historically accurate reality, and I was interested to work with this premise: what if magic was generated from scratch under certain unique constellations of circumstances and human lived experiences and emotional states, for instance, extreme trauma or enduring hope or devotion?

It wouldn’t be by anyone’s design, and it would be hard to predict what or who would become the magic’s “carrier” once it was produced. It would be a sort of undomesticated, involuntary magic for which no one really knows the rules or capabilities, though one could make assumptions or jump to conclusions according to one’s beliefs or character, in trying to harness it to one’s own benefit.

If we agree that as humanity, we have always been “producing” magic in our stories, histories, and self-narratives (“it was a miracle that I survived!”) as a matter of belief or metaphor, to help us parse reality or even just to communicate it — then my premise in this novel simply takes this fact and implements it. Literally and physically.


The Witch of Prague: Asterism|Homeward Books

Author socials: Website|Blog

Birdfeeding

17 Mar 2026 02:51 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is cloudy and cold.  At least the howling wind stopped.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a few sparrows and house finches.

I put out water for the birds.

Many of the plants that were sprouting have died from the hard freeze.  :/  Some still look fine though.  At least some of the sprouts in my jug and tub greenhouses have survived.

EDIT 3/17/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 3/17/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I've seen a large flock of sparrows and two male cardinals.

EDIT 3/17/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I am done for the night. 

sovay: (Morell: quizzical)
[personal profile] sovay
For Saint Patrick's Day, I had a foreign body removed from my eye and was immunologically shot in the shoulder. Who needs booze?

multifandom icons.

17 Mar 2026 09:37 pm
wickedgame: (Nancy | Nancy Drew | Orange)
[personal profile] wickedgame posting in [community profile] icons
Fandoms: 9-1-1, 9-1-1: Lone Star, 1923, A Discovery of Witches, Avatar: The Last Airbender, Echo, Elite, Fallout, Heated Rivalry, Stargirl, The Order, Yellowjackets

heatedrivalry-lgbt1.png theorder-2x02aa.png fallout-1x05a.png
rest HERE[community profile] mundodefieras 
 

Birds

17 Mar 2026 03:21 pm
ribirdnerd: perched bird (Default)
[personal profile] ribirdnerd posting in [community profile] birdfeeding
Tuesday

Happy St Patrick's Day

The birds are back today after the big rain and windstorm yesterday.

Blue Jays, Chickadees, Tufted Titmouse, White breasted Nuthatch, Robins and Mourning Doves were all around.

i also had my first Chipmunk sighting of the spring, it's finally warm enough for them to emerge.

2026.03.17

17 Mar 2026 02:07 pm
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
Top election official Steve Simon says SAVE America Act would create ‘chaos,’ disenfranchise voters in Minnesota
A Trump priority under debate in the U.S. Senate would require proof of citizenship to register to vote.
by Cleo Krejci and Ana Radelat
https://www.minnpost.com/national/washington/2026/03/top-election-official-steve-simon-says-save-america-act-would-create-chaos-disenfranchise-voters-in-minnesota/

Preserving and enriching Vietnamese culture in Minnesota
By 2023, the population of Vietnamese Minnesotans had grown to more than 33,000. Amid this growth, Vietnamese Community of Minnesota began hosting small gatherings as well as large events, and providing resources to the community.
By Elena Mai, MNopedia
https://www.minnpost.com/mnopedia/2026/03/preserving-and-enriching-vietnamese-culture-in-minnesota-through-vietnamese-community/ Read more... )

Things to Like

17 Mar 2026 02:01 pm
yourlibrarian: MerlinOverShoulder-ninneve (MERL-MerlinOverShoulder-ninneve)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian
1) Whoa, the changes at Tumblr have meant a flood of people signing up for accounts at Pillowfort. I just went through a feed four times longer than usual.

2) We've watched four episodes of Starfleet Academy and are both pleasantly surprised by it. I confess I haven't been very enthused by the new crop of shows. In fact my favorite season was one that it seems most viewers didn't care for, which was S1 of Discovery. Read more... )

3) Looks like it isn't just late night shows that are winding to a close but talk shows and entertainment news. I can see why podcasts would be far cheaper to make and competing with the audience, but I do wonder if most can put out episodes as consistently as is done with larger productions. (I note, for example, that Access Hollywood has four hosts).

4) Not being a reader of Outlander, I had no idea there was a separate Lord John Grey series. A spinoff based on the books sounds great, and you'd think with the success of Heated Rivalry (it was a Jeopardy question this week!) that the timing would be perfect. Granted, a period piece with a large cast would be significantly more expensive, but it also has a built in audience via its linked TV show and books.

5) Watched Zootopia 2 and enjoyed it. I particularly liked how they worked in references to favorite things from the first film without having it slow down or detract from the story in progress. For us this was wolves starting a howl, and the appearance of the sloth. There were lots of little in-jokes (such as the Hulu menu) and things moved along quite well, with fun new characters to meet.

Poll #34380 Kudos Footer-562
This poll is anonymous.
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 13

Want to leave a Kudos?

View Answers

Kudos!
13 (100.0%)



Profile

firecat: red panda, winking (Default)
firecat (attention machine in need of calibration)

March 2026

S M T W T F S
1234567
89 1011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Page Summary

Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated 24 Mar 2026 03:59 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios