(no subject)

Aug. 15th, 2025 11:37 am
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[personal profile] greghousesgf
I had the nicest time out yesterday, I went to the Exploratorium and saw lots of really wild displays and stuff!

2025 52 Card Project: Week 32: Fringe

Aug. 15th, 2025 12:50 pm
pegkerr: (Default)
[personal profile] pegkerr
This past week's Year of Adventure event was to attend two Minnesota Fringe Festival shows as a guest of [personal profile] naomikritzer and her husband Ed. If you're not familiar with the Fringe Festival, it's a week in which local theater venues and actors (amateur and professional) put on forty or fifty of shows over the course of about a week, some written entirely for the occasion. The festival has been running for years.

We saw "The Book of Mordor," (Lord of the Rings crossed with The Book of Mormon) and a parody of Thornton Wilder's "Our Town," entitled "Our Zombie Town." We went out to dinner together between the two shows.

I've attended a couple of Fringe shows previously with Fiona, but it has been years. I enjoyed both performances.

I have never seen The Book of Mormon, but from what I know about the story, the crossover worked surprisingly well. There were funny bits of stage business, and the performance was satisfying.

As for the other show, I've been in Our Town myself, and I enjoyed this parody. Some parts were ragged, but the final image (the people of the town sitting in separate chairs, each glued to their phones, their faces illuminated only by the phone light) has stuck with me since I've seen the show. It's a perfect parody of the last act (in which people in the chairs represented the dead in the graveyard) and a sly response to what has always seemed to me to be the most important line in the last act of the original: "Let's look at one another!"

Good theater makes you think as well as laugh, and that final image will stick with me.

Image description: Top: Promotional picture for Fringe show 'Our Zombie Town,' a parody of Thornton Wilder's Our Town. Four people stare as if hypnotized at their phones, ignoring the viewer, their faces lit by the phone screen. Semi-transparent stage lights is overlaid over this picture, giving the picture a greenish cast. Bottom: Promotional picture for Fringe Show 'The Book of Mordor' (Frodo holds up the ring on a chain). Center: a Fringe 2025 button. Right a Fringe line flag.

Fringe

32 Fringe

Click on the links to see the 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021 52 Card Project galleries.
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‘Slut berries’ are a terrible name for nipples. I can’t take this porn seriously.

That’s a term for nipples? It sounds like it should be an old-timey spelling of sloe berries from a 14th century recipe.

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Trapped, by Michael Northrop

Aug. 15th, 2025 09:52 am
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


Seven teenagers get trapped in their high school during a blizzard when they miss the bus that evacuated the rest of the school.

This was easily the worst book I've read all year, and I've read some doozies. I read it because I'd bought a copy for the shop for the niche of "children's/younger YA survival books for kids who've already read all of Gary Paulson and "I Survived."" I am going to return it to the publisher (Scholastic, which should be ashamed of itself) forthwith, because it is AWFUL.

Why is this book so bad?

1. It's incredibly misogynist. The narrator, Scotty Weems, is constantly thinking of girls in a gross, slimy, objectifying way.

The two girl characters, who get trapped in the high school along with five boys, never do anything useful. One's entire personality is "hot" and every time she's mentioned, it's with a gross leering description of her body. The other girl's entire personality is "hot girl's friend."

2. The characters have exactly one characteristic each, and even that one often gets forgotten, to the extent that I kept mixing up "normal boy" with "mechanically inclined boy." The others are "dangerous boy" and "weird boy." The latter gets downgraded to "not actually weird, just funny" (as in makes one supposedly humorous comment once.) We get no insight into them, their backstories, their home lives, etc, because none of them ever really talk to each other about anything interesting despite being trapped together for a week!

3. SO MANY gross descriptions of pimples, peeing, and pooping.

4. The book is boring. No one does anything interesting on-page until the second to last chapter, when it FINALLY occurs to Scotty to make snowshoes. Most of the book is Scotty's inner monologue about pimples, pooping, peeing, and hot girls. The kids barely interact!

5. The kids keep saying that help won't come because no one even knows they're missing, but that makes no sense. Every single one of them was supposed to get picked up. It's never explained why SEVEN DIFFERENT FAMILIES wouldn't notice that their kids never came home.

6. The incredibly contrived scene where Best Friend Girl comes staggering in screaming and disheveled, repeating, "Les, Les!" This is the name of Dangerous Boy. One of Indistinguishable Boys assumes Les sexually assaulted her and runs out and attacks Les. Best Friend Girl recovers enough to explain that she went to a room and it was dark and cold and she got lost, and she was trying to say there was LESS light and heat there. Because that's what you'd naturally gasp out when freaking out, instead of, say, "Dark! Cold!"

I feel like the existence of this scene in a PUBLISHED BOOK lowered the collective intelligence of the universe by at least half a point.

7. No interesting use is made of the school setting. The kids open their own lockers to get extra clothes and snacks, find pudding and canned peaches in the cafeteria, and spend the rest of the time silently huddled in classrooms, occasionally checking their useless cellphones that don't have any signal. Toward the end, they start a fire, and then, OFF-PAGE, construct a snowmobile (!).

Things they don't do: Break into other kids' lockers in the hope of finding useful stuff. Attempt to cook the cafeteria food. Search the library for survival tips. Get mats from the gym so they're not sleeping on freezing floors. Search classrooms and the teacher's lounge for useful stuff. Have a pick-up ball game to keep warm. Find ways of entertaining themselves without cell phones. HAVE GETTING TO KNOW YOU CONVERSATIONS - WHAT IS THE POINT OF DOING THE BREAKFAST CLUB WITHOUT THIS?

Spoilers! Read more... )

Truly terrible.

ETA: I just discovered that it went out of print soon after I purchased it (GOOD) and so is not returnable (DAMMIT).

Week 7 - Prompts

Aug. 14th, 2025 09:07 pm
clauderainsrm: (Default)
[personal profile] clauderainsrm posting in [community profile] therealljidol
 Yes.  You read that correctly - there's an S at the end. Because with an intersection each partner gets a different prompt. But again, you can figure that out. 

Your prompts for the week are *spins wheel*: 


BAT 
Oxytocin Loop

The deadline to link your entries back to this thread is Wednesday, August 20th at 7pm ET.   (and remember to send me your accusations on the identity of a Killer!) 

Week 7 - Twist Reveal

Aug. 14th, 2025 08:24 pm
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[personal profile] clauderainsrm posting in [community profile] therealljidol
We got rid of one of the "No Twist" options last week. So I'm not going to ask the wheel about removing another one. 

I'm hoping for something good. Or "good".. or at least interesting!!

Come on Wheel.... show me what you've got!!

First wheel - Twist or No Twist... And the wheel says.... *spins*  TWIST!!!!

So we move to the second wheel... 

*spins* 

Well, at least YOU will love this one.  Well, some of you. 

It's an INTERSECTION!!!

The Wheel was apparently happy with how last week went, and wants to see more of it. 

For those of you who haven't been around when there is an Intersection it's pretty straight forward.  You find yourself a partner.  Feel free to use this space to do so.  You can handle that part anyway you like, as well as how you work together.

But you create two related pieces (one each), it's still your independent work after all. But the pieces should somehow relate to each other, How that works for you is of course up to you!  :) 

Results - Week 6

Aug. 14th, 2025 08:08 pm
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[personal profile] clauderainsrm posting in [community profile] therealljidol
 Up until I hit refresh, I was mentally planning for another tiebreaker round. 

However that will not be needed. A single vote changed that fate and gave us a different sad one. 

We are saying goodbye to an Idol legend [personal profile] roina_arwen whose stint as a Kil... oh wait, sorry, she wasn't actually a Killer.  Just wanted to see you react to that!  :D 

Seriously though - thank you for coming out and I hope you will stick around to see what the Wheel has in store! (Hopefully a chance for you to get back into the fray!) 


Hominids, by Robert Sawyer

Aug. 14th, 2025 10:30 am
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


A Neanderthal from an alternate universe where Homo Sapiens went extinct and Neanderthals lived into the present day is sucked into our world due to an experiment gone wrong. The book follows his interactions with humans in one storyline, and the repercussions in Neanderthal World in another.

I picked up this book because I like Neanderthals and alternate dimensions that aren't about relatively recent history (ie, not about "What if Nazis won WWII?"). The parts of the book that are actually about Neanderthal World are really fun. It's a genuinely different society, where men and women live separately for the most part, surveillance by implanted computers prevents most crime, mammoths and other large mammals did not go extinct, there are back scratching posts in homes, they wear special eating gloves rather than using utensils or eating barehanded, etc. This was all great.

The problem with this book was everything not directly about Neanderthal society. Bizarrely, this included almost the entire plotline on Neanderthal World, which consisted of a murder investigation and trial of the missing Neanderthal's male partner (what we would call his husband or lover), which was mostly tedious and ensured that we see very little of Neanderthal society. The Neanderthal interactions on our world were fun, but the non-Neanderthal parts were painful. There is a very graphic, on-page stranger rape of the main female character, solely so she can realize that Neanderthal dude is not like human men. There's two sequels, which I will not read.

It got some pretty entertaining reviews:

"☆☆☆☆☆1 out of 5 stars.
No. JUST NO.
I am sorry, but the premise of inherently and innately peaceful cultures with more advanced technology than conflict-driven cultures is patently absurd. Read Alistair Reynolds' Century Rain for an examination of how technological advancement depends on strife: necessity is the mother of invention, and the greatest necessity of all is fighting for survival. I will not be lectured for my male homosapien hubris by a creature that would never have gotten past the late neolithic in technology."

Hominids won a Hugo! Here are the other nominees.

1st place: Hominids by Robert J. Sawyer (Canadian)
2nd place: Kiln People by David Brin (American)
3rd place: Bones of the Earth by Michael Swanwick (American)
4th place: The Scar by China Miéville (British)
5th place: The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson (American)

Amazingly, I have read or attempted to read all of them. My ratings:

1st place: Bones of the Earth by Michael Swanwick (American)
2nd place: The Scar by China Miéville (British).
3rd place: The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson (American)
4th place: Hominids by Robert J. Sawyer (Canadian)
5th place: Kiln People by David Brin (American)

If I'd voted, it would be very close between Bones of the Earth and The Scar, both of which I loved. I made a valiant attempt at The Years of Rice and Salt. Like all of KSR's books, I'm sure it's quite good but not for me. I know I read Kiln People but recall literally nothing about it, so I'll give Hominids a place above it for having some nice Neanderthal stuff.

The actual ballot is a complete embarrassment.

Hello again

Aug. 14th, 2025 09:38 am
animama: (Default)
[personal profile] animama
I am still alive!







I am officially laid off from Nickelodeon. There was another round of mergers, with a new CEO. No new projects have been greenlit for my department during the turmoil, and although they tried keeping the artists as long as possible I have been out of work since end of June.

After jumping through all the hoops I am getting unemployment payments from the state. I am honestly surprised since I was a remote worker for the New York division, but Nick has been taking out all the proper taxes so I did qualify. That only lasts 6 months and it has already been a month...clock is ticking on the job search. I am on the internet every morning going through the job boards, but it is not easy. Last week I found one new listing, for a Canadian company that might be open to remote work. This week I have not found anything. Hope is that Nickelodeon will start new projects now that the top exec shuffling is done, but who knows how long that will take. Execs have a bad habit of tossing out favorite projects of previous department heads, and it was just a year ago that my last department was touted as the "way of the future" by the now ousted boss. All the politics are way above my pay grade. Us artists just want to work and pay the bills.

Finances are tight but okay for the moment. We have a bit of savings left. I am dusting off and selling some collectibles from the basement finally. Apparently animation cels are worth money now? I should have grabbed armloads back when I had the chance, LOL. Ebay has streamlined the process of selling stuff, so the most complicated part is finding correct sized cardboard boxes for shipping.

Kid is moving back out this weekend for the fall semester. I will miss having him around, but our grocery bill will be cut down to a third. 

Cats are still cute, weather is dreadfully hot but the view is lovely and the fruit trees are doing very well this year. Apples are slowly turning red. Chickens love the wormy cherries. Pitting the cherries are a bit of a pain, but the birds get so excited for them that it is worth the trouble.

I am trying to get up the motivation to draw something again. I need to do a drawing for Magic Rat. 

Here is hoping that a new job will be found soon...wish me luck!

how that ball rushes up on you

Aug. 13th, 2025 09:22 pm
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[personal profile] musesfool
I'm off work tomorrow and Friday - I have my annual eye exam tomorrow (they have sent me about 17 requests to confirm and I have each time but wtf) and I decided to just take Friday off for a long weekend - so I logged off work at 4:30 and ended up taking a long nap. I woke up to an intense thunderstorm with a truly shocking (pun intended) amount of lightning.

My brother had hip replacement surgery this morning and it went well - he is home already!

Baby Miss L loved the books - especially the Pete the Kitty goes to preschool one and I got adorable videos of her "reading" it.

Speaking of books, I did indeed finish the last 3 books of Dungeon Crawler Carl over the weekend and I was incensed that book 7 was not the end - there are supposedly 3 more books coming to wrap things up and ugh, I hate having to wait. This write-up on tumblr (vague spoilers for the whole series, as an enticement to read the books) is a great summary of why you should read it and then come talk to me about it. I am not even a cat person and I love Princess Donut! There is a wide array of female characters! There is a lot of gory violence and an unfortunate amount of fatphobia (i.e., any), but the anti-capitalist rage is real. I just hope Dinniman can stick the landing.

*
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SPHINCTER ENGAGED...
PENETRATION CONFIRMED...
COPULATION PROGRESS ███▁▁▁▁▁▁▁ 30%


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(no subject)

Aug. 13th, 2025 11:19 am
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[personal profile] greghousesgf
I had the nicest time at Skeptics in the Pub last night, my friend who brings me also brought his daughter who I really got along great with. Now back to home with my dishwasher that doesn't fucking work and my neighbors' screaming baby.

The Journey, by Joyce Carol Thomas

Aug. 13th, 2025 10:36 am
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


This is one of the most unusual books I've ever read. And if you've been reading my reviews for a while, you know what a strong statement that is. Here's the buries-the-lede back cover:

The town's teenagers are dying. One by one they are mysteriously disappearing but Meggie Alexander refuses to wait in fear. She and her boyfriend Matthew decide to get to the bottom of all the strange goings-on. And they discover a horrible secret.

Now someone is stalking them - but who? There's only one thing that can save Meggie now - the stories a tarantula told her as a baby.


Bet you weren't expecting that, huh?

This was a Scholastic novel from 1988. I'd seen other Thomas novels in that period but never read them, because they all looked like depressing historicals about the black experience - the one I recall seeing specifically was Touched by Fire. I sure never saw this one. I found it in the used children's section of The Last Bookstore in downtown LA.

Any description of this book won't truly convey the experience of reading it, but I'll give it a shot. It starts with a prologue in omniscient POV, largely from the POV of a talking tarantula visiting Meggie soon after she's born, chatting and spinning webs that tell stories to her:

"I get so sick and tired of common folk trying to put their nobody feet on my queenly head. Me? I was present in the first world. Furthermore," the spider boasted, squinting her crooked eyes, "I come from a looooong line of royalty and famous people. Millions of years ago I saw the first rainbow. I ruled as the Egyptian historical arachnid. I'm somebody."

As I transcribe that, it occurs to me that she shares some DNA with The Last Unicorn's butterfly.

The prologue ends when Meggie's mother spots the spider and tries to kill her, believing her daughter is in danger. Chapter one opens when Meggie is fifteen. Briefly, it feels like a YA novel about being black and young in (then)-modern America, and it kind of is that, except for the very heightened writing style, including the dialogue. Thomas is a poet and not trying to write in a naturalistic manner. It's often gorgeous:

She ended [the sermon] with these resounding words falling quiet as small sprinklings of nutmeg whispering into a bowl of whipping cream.

The milieu Meggie lives in is lived-in and sharply and beautifully drawn, skipping from a barbershop where customers complain about women preaching to a quick sketch of a neighborhood woman trying to make her poor house beautiful and not noticing that its real beauty lies in her children to Meggie's exquisitely evoked joy in running. And then Meggie finds the HEADLESS CORPSE of one of her classmates! We check in on a trio of terrible neighbors plotting to do something evil to the town's teenagers! The local spiders are concerned!

This book has the prose one would expect to find in a novel written by a poet about being a black teenager in America, except it's also about headless corpses and spider guardians. It is a trip and a half.

Read more... )

I am so glad that Thomas wrote this amazingly weird novel, and that someone at the bookshop bought it, and that I just happened to come in while it was on the shelf. It's like Adrian Tchaikovsky collaborated with Angela Johnson and Lois Duncan. There has never been anything like it, and there never will be again. Someone ought to reprint it.