November 26th, 2025
sabotabby: (books!)
posted by [personal profile] sabotabby at 06:53am on 2025-11-26 under
Just finished: To Leave a Warrior Behind: The Life and Stories of Charles R. Saunders, the Man Who Rewrote Fantasy by Jon Tattrie. This was so good. Saunders was a fascinating person both on and off the page, but also the biography is really well written and a page-turner. I don't have a lot to add beyond that you'll like it if you're at all interested in genre fiction, Black social movements, and/or the history of Black communities in Halifax. Or just interesting people in general.

 
The Emotional Craft of Fiction: How to Write the Story Beneath the Surface by Donald Maass. And now I am going to go on a rant for a bit.

This was one of two craft books that another author recommended to me (the other being The Magic Words by Cheryl B. Klein, which actually was quite good). Maass is a well-known literary agent who runs a well-known literary agency so I think it's important to read what he has to say. However this...not good. Bad even. My initial impression was "eh, there's some good advice in here" and gradually shifted to "maybe this is why not enough books by BIPOC and/or queer authors getting traditionally published???" 

I have a number of criticisms, the first being that the book could have been half the length if he'd just cut the lengthy vague personal opinions and autobiographic rambles. It's not concise. He'll take a metaphor and stretch it across several pages while admitting it's not a great metaphor. Why? Was he getting paid by the word? Unclear. 

The second is that a lot of the advice amounts to "write better," with no real suggestions for that. Like, he quotes part of a Churchill speech to talk about inspiring leaders, and one of the exercises is "give your character an inspiring speech." How. Tell me how. Or at least analyze the Churchill speech to talk about what's working in it. 

The problem with talking about emotion in writing is that this is built often through a prolonged time with the characters, so if you quote excerpts from books no one has read (there are a few classics in there, but a lot of the examples are from books I'd never read, like Christian fiction), you need context. This is something Klein does very well in her book—she talks about the well-known ones that we'd all have encountered, like the awful wizard books and The Fault In Our Stars and the Hunger Games, but her most detailed analysis is a book she edited called Marcelo In the Real World. Assuming no one has read it (I'd never heard of it), she not only analyzes lengthy passages, but sets up the entire context of the story so we can see why those passages work. Whereas Maass quotes a paragraph and assumes we'll get the emotion, whereas my reaction is, "who are these people and why should I care?"

But most of all, it's very shallow for a book about, well, feelings. He warns away from sending your characters to overly dark places or making them overly dark people, and the autobiographical sketches suggest an upper-middle class, cishet, white, cozy life. Readers want to feel connected and inspired by your characters, so they should be positive and inspirational.

I'm sorry what.

I was hoping, in a book like this, to get a sense of how to better twist the knife. His breakdown of The Fault Of Our Stars amounts to "we feel sad because of how these kids lived, not how they die." Really? Is that all you take from it, emotionally speaking?

One passage really stands out to me, and that's an incident where he describes trying to pay for tickets for a game that his young son really wants to see, only he's lost his wallet on the subway. His wife is with him but doesn't have her wallet. He is faced with a moment of panic at the prospect of disappointing his son.

Okay, that's pretty good! I like the idea of investing relatively low-stakes moments with emotion. Only...he goes on to talk about something else, and then adds "by the way my wife had her wallet after all so she paid and I regained my cool and we all saw the game." Which, I'm sure is what happened, but why tell the story if that's the ending?

If I were writing it, off the top of my head, why not have the parents argue, the wife codependent on her husband, the husband irresponsible to leave his wallet on the subway. It could get public, ugly, and explosive. And then the child starts crying, more upset at the prospect of his parents fighting than missing the game. In an upbeat story, they realize that their son is the most important thing and stop fighting in order to comfort him. Or in a more adult story, they make up, coldly, but the resentment continues to fester, and the absent wallets become a metaphor for patriarchal control. Anything other than "oh it all turned out to be fine."

So yeah this book didn't do it for me.

Currently reading: The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. The library gods sent me a chaser after that last one. It's about two generations of women; Minerva, in 1998, lives on a rather beautiful and extremely haunted campus, researching a forgotten author who was a contemporary of Lovecraft. In 1908, her great-grandmother, Alba, lives on a farm and years for the elegant, sophisticated life that her uncle leads in the city. I've just hit the point where Minerva runs into the wealthy son of a university donor who knew the author and has been invited to brunch with the family, and Alba's uncle has come to live with them (and maybe convince her brother to sell the family farm). Anyway, it's SMG, obviously I'm into it.
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

With the visit to Bronner's kicking off the Christmas season, what did we have to look forward to the next weekend but kicking of the Christmas season? Here it was at the Nite Lites show of so very many light fixtures at the Michigan International Speedway, down in Michigan's Brooklyn. In past years we've taken up driving through it, usually around Twelfth Night.

But before they open up to cars driving through they do a 5K, either a run or a walk as you like. I finally took [personal profile] bunnyhugger's invitation to do the 5K with her and signed up for the race, although too late to get a T-shirt or hoodie. All I would get is the official badge of entry, a foam crown of reindeer horns donated by Brooklyn Plastics and that will someday be something we have to throw out. Or turn into support for other projects; [personal profile] bunnyhugger thought this would be a good foam to use to keep costume masks from being to uncomfortable on the nose. And then moments before leaving for it [personal profile] bunnyhugger discovered she hadn't signed up yet, and she worried that there wouldn't be time for her to sign up on the spot.

There was time, though. The run/walk turns out to be very laid back, with on-the-spot signup maybe two lines long. The event is untimed, and you don't even get a number or anything, just the foam antlers mentioned above and you really only have to wear them to start.

The walk starts at a point that's midway through the course, as you see it driving through, but a point near the grandstands. Also a point where we got to see just how mid-century the styling of the support buildings of the raceway are; so much of it looks like a 1958 motel in ways that charmed us. It's almost worth visiting the place for the architecture alone.

Five kilometers is a pretty good walk, but not one that I'd normally need over an hour for. But this walk ended up not quite an hour and a half since it's so easy to stop and photograph things. So, in like eight months or so check in for a lot of pictures of sea serpents or the Twelve Days Of Christmas or an outline of Michigan with a Santa cap on the Thumb. But it'll save me feeling quite the same impulse to photograph everything when we get to driving through late in the upcoming Christmas season.


Now, for a couple more pictures from the Musée, and its wonders of carousel rides and fairground games:

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Another carousel centaur! I don't know if this is a Boer War figure.


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But here's the organ, all set for someone to start a waltz.


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Near the organ was this sculpture of a horse with rider, pretty intimidating to stare up at.


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And here's the second carousel! The horses look about like what you might see on any ride but what's that to the right?


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Yes: it's a rowboat, that rocks back and forth as you go around. I'm a little sorry we didn't get a ride on that.


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The docent showing something about one of the horses. Mostly I was getting a picture of the boat here, though.


Trivia: The 26th of November, 1963, was President Lyndon Johnson's first working day in the White House as President. He met with John F Kennedy's congressional liaison (Lawrence F O'Brien) and signed two bills which Congress had passed the 21st of November, after Kennedy left for Dallas. Source: From Failing Hands: The Story of Presidential Succession, John D Feerick.

Currently Reading: Lost Popeye Zine, Volume 75: Grand Poobahr of Smoochistan, Ralph Stein, Bill Zaboly. Editor Stephanie Noelle.

November 25th, 2025
minoanmiss: Detail of a modern statue of a Minoan goddess holding up double axes in each hand. (Labrys)
posted by [personal profile] minoanmiss at 10:03am on 2025-11-25
Mood:: 'anxious' anxious
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

We've made a tradition of going to Bronner's Christmas Wonderland for [personal profile] bunnyhugger's birthday. This year, her birthday was a Wednesday, with the weekend before occupied by a pinball tournament in Grand Rapids and our disappointing Closing Day at Cedar Point, and the Saturday afterward occupied by another pinball tournament, so late as the next Sunday was, it was go then or not at all.

A more substantial break from tradition is we didn't eat just when we arrived, because it was way too crowded. Instead we went shopping for a pre-lit Christmas tree, something for our bedroom. The idea here being that we always have a hard time finding a real live tree that's the right size --- like, five, five-and-a-half-foot --- to put up there. With the artificial trees we found there's not actually much choice in the five, five-and-a-half-foot range we wanted. But the state of artificial trees has improved remarkably since the 1980s, when my family had a couple of trees that wished they could be cell phone towers.

After a bunch of looking around and discovering that you can switch the LED lights to different patterns, including some that are definitely too irritating to use in a bedroom, we picked out and bought one! Or at least, we got the order slip that we would, at the end of the day, bring to the register and then go to the pickup window for. It's a modest-sized box, one that our rabbit chinned several times before I took it up to the bedroom, so I guess it's her tree now.

This got our visit to Bronner's off on the ``wrong'' side of the big Christmas complex. We spent the day going around it in a more scrambled version than usual and, you know, that felt pretty good. We did spend a little time looking for a customizable mouse ornament, since we have four mice as pets this year, and the strangest thing is we couldn't find one. We did get a custom ornament for [personal profile] bunnyhugger's father's dog, and then we realized that her mother has a cat, why don't we get something for her? Again we didn't find a customizable cat ornament that really worked.

We had got off to a late start, part of why we arrived at Bronner's in time to see the lunch rush at the snack counter. Yet somehow we felt like we did have about the right amount of time to spend wandering around in the teaser to the Christmas season. We would go on after this to the Cheese House and get possibly too much in cheese spreads and blocks (there are ones we haven't opened yet, two weeks afterward), and then to a rare restaurant meal in town. Made for a nice Sunday and even got done early enough we didn't technically close out any of the three places. That never happens.


In photos, I'm still on our layover in Paris on the first day of our trip but, y'know, how often are you going to see things like this? So please pardon the occasional boring photo because we're soon going to be up on things you won't believe.

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Now we're moving into the second of the big exhibit halls. The door here has an archway that looks like a carousel's scenery panels above it, though I don't know if they really were.


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Little stand outside the venue with the promise of information pamphlets, though my recollection is we were roped off from this.


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The astronaut suit was, I believe, constructed a couple years ago for publicity and tied to the anniversary of the French launching of a cat into space.


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Close-up of the angel-like figure ready to clobber you with a wreath.


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And, farther off down the hall, I hope this all needs no explanation because I don't remember that we got one for the fairy-wing gown or the mannequin legs dressed for a can-can.


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Around this time I noticed there was a nice silhouetted view of the courtyard.


Trivia: Austro-Hungarian Empress Maria Theresa's 1770 order that all houses be given numbers specified that the numbers were to be red in Vienna, black everywhere else in the Empire, and in Arabic numerals, except for Jewish persons' homes, which would be in Roman numerals. Source: The Address Book: What Street Adresses Reveal About Identity, Race, Wealth, and Power, Deirdre Mask.

Currently Reading: The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Kevin Baker.

November 24th, 2025
nancylebov: (green leaves)
posted by [personal profile] nancylebov at 05:23pm on 2025-11-24 under , ,
Notes from the Best SF Books of 2025 panel at Philcon.

A Tangle of Time (sequel to the Hexologists)

Wearing the Lion (Wiswell, story about Hercules)

Aftertaste (LaVelle) ghosts and cooking

The Splinter Effect (I think it's the one where time travel makes it possible to go into the past, but not carry things forward-- if you want to protect an artifact, you have to hide it somewhere in its time and find it again in your time)

The Will of the Many (elite academy gets a student who won't get sucked into the hierarchy)

The Grimoire Grammar School Parent Teacher Association-- complications when a werewolf daughter goes to a dangerous magic school

The Stardust Grail (finding a major alien artifact)

Inventing the Renaissance (non-fiction by Ada Palmer-- the premise is that the Renaissance wasn't really a thing. From things she said, the glorious eras when the rich commission wonderful things aren't great times to live-- if the rich are competing that hard, power is shaky and the fighting affects the non-rich)

What We Can Know (tracking down a poem after worldwide catastrophe)

Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil (woman with limited life gets into magic)

The Mars House (people on Mars are dealing with hazardously strong people from earth, how can they live together? I'll note that I could write the premise of this from memory, unlike many of the others where I used amazon)

Those Beyond the Walls (dystopia, murder mystery)
siderea: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] siderea at 03:51pm on 2025-11-24 under
I want a widget that doesn't exist so I might be stuck designing it for 3D printing. I have never done this before. For design software, I gather both Onshape and TinkerCAD are available for free. Anybody with experience have opinions which I should start with? I have never used any CAD program before, but am not new to drafting. OTOH my drafting experience was all about 40 years ago. Open to other suggestions available for the Mac for free.

Also, I don't have my own 3D printer, so I'll be availing myself of various public-access options. But this means the iterative design feedback loop will be irritatingly protracted. Also I might have to pay money for each go round, so I'd like to minimize that. Also I am still disabled and not able to spend a lot of time in a makerspace. But I am a complete n00b to 3D printing and have zero idea what I'm doing. Does anybody have any recommendations for good educational references online about how to design for 3D printing so your widget is more likely to come out right the first or at least third time? By which I mean both print right and also function like you wanted – I know basically nothing about working with the material(s) and how they behave and what the various options are, while the widget I want to make will be functional not ornamental and have like tolerances and affordances and stuff. So finding a way to get those clues without hands-on experience, or at least minimizing the hands-on experience would be superb.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
posted by [personal profile] redbird at 01:18pm on 2025-11-24 under ,
I think I have arranged to transfer the inherited IRA money from my mother's account at BNY to a new account in my name at Fidelity. It's at Fidelity because they were willing and able to do this, rather than telling me that I would have to go somewhere else to get a medallion signature.

A couple of weeks ago Adrian's advisor at Fidelity said that they could provide the medallion signature, and would do it for free because she has an account there. When she called this morning to make an appointment, they told her that they couldn't do that for her partner, but if I created an account today to transfer the money into, I could go there tomorrow and get the medallion signature. So, I called Fidelity to set up the account.

That went more smoothly than I expected. Someone walked me through the process of creating the new account, and setting up the transfer. He said the Fidelity back office people will take care of moving the money, and he didn't think I would need the medallion signature, meaning I don't need to go to their office. The website said the "estimated completion date" was Dec. 16, and the man I was talking to said it would probably be sooner than that.

I want this to be done before the end of the year, so I can take the 2025 required minimum distribution.

I am hopeful that this will work, even if they call me and tell ne to come in and get the medallion signature guarantee.
minoanmiss: sketch of two Minoan wome (Minoan Friends)
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Couple weeks ago I went to donate platelets. I've fallen into doing that this year, and it's kind of nice. It takes a couple hours, but they set up the TV for you to watch something and it's let me catch up on Mystery Science Theater 3000 some. Plus there's an almost unsettling number of gifts given for donating.

What takes a couple hours is that they can only remove the whole blood from you, so they do that, filter out the platelets, and return the rest to your other arm. And when I went to do that the start of this month, I had a curious failure. The needle in my left arm, taking out blood, was doing fune, but the needle in my right just wasn't making contact. The saline they were trying to inject wouldn't get into my vein and it just produced a small bruise. They tried a couple times but couldn't succeed. So I went home with a failed donation.

Thing is you can donate platelets in principle every week, and especially when there's nothing but the need for my elbow to heal up, and I went back in last Monday. Since I'd had the failure last time I figured the thing to do was draw blood out from my right arm and put the filtered blood back in my left, and give things the chance to balance. Getting the return needle in went just fine; apparently my left arm is really good for this stuff. But the right arm? They could figure where there were two veins either of which were viable but they bent off in weird directions, apparently, and while they finally got a needle into one of them, they also picked up some debris material so that none of the blood could get into the needle rather than make another bruise. The other vein might have been workable but it was too close to the already-present damage so there wasn't any using it. So that's two failures in a row and I'm plum out of arms to try donating with.

They did give me the Red Cross Pac-Man socks that are the gift for people donating platelets through to December 7th, though, which is kind.


More pictures here from the Musée des Arts Forains from our layover in Paris:

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Swan-boat chariot on the the carousel with the fine steps. You can see hooks that I guess were once for reins, like a swan would let you get away with reins. That or it needs readers.


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And a sheep, another rare animal for carousels.


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Couple of figures on balconies that, it turns out, would move and 'sing' along to a massive organ, making this part of a huge mechanical performance.


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More of the mechanism, part of a show that we got to see.


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And a comic foreground, ready for you to poke your head into.


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Looking back again at the carousel. You can see the sides of other chariots hug on the walls in the background.


Trivia: Shortly before accepting the 1922 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on the quantum-mechanical model of atomic structure, Niels Bohr received a telegram from György Hevesy and Dirk Coster, who had just isolated the element hafnium on their first attempt, sifting through zirconium which Bohr's model predicted would have the not-yet-discovered element's closest chemical analogue. Bohr announced the discovery at his acceptance speech. Source: The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World From the Periodic Table of the Elements, Sam Kean.

Currently Reading: The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Kevin Baker.

November 23rd, 2025

This month, the Philippines has been struck by some of the most destructive typhoons in recent memory. Unitarian Universalists may be aware that we have religious kinfolk there. Look for updates from the UUA Director of Global Connections, and please consider a gift to the UUA Disaster Relief Fund:

twistedchick: watercolor painting of coffee cup on wood table (Default)
posted by [personal profile] twistedchick at 10:43pm on 2025-11-23
Does anyone here know enough about Greek patronymics and ancient Greek names to help to give a reasonable pseudonym to a character from about 300 BCE? I keep looking up lists of names and I am not sure how to get the result I want. And this after a year of college-level Ancient Greek -- we didn't do much that I remember on the nature of ancient Greek names. Also, the textbook was by Liddell and Scott, and while I don't recall who Scott was, Liddell was the real Alice in Wonderland's father.

Help me find the right name for this character, please?
malada: bass guitar (Default)
posted by [personal profile] malada at 05:02pm on 2025-11-23
After adding another huge can of kidney beans and a few hours of slow cooking the burn is down to heat so it isn't inedible. Putting on top of a burger was good and paired with some cornbread was actually pretty good. I'll have another helping for supper

This episode has made me realize something about my previous batches of chili - they had flavor and spice but just seemed bland. What I was missing was heat - the kind you get from hot peppers. I didn't add any cumin or chili powder to this batch because there was so much heat. So my next batch will have the sweet peppers and a few (just a few!) more aggressive peppers to add heat along with the cumin and chili powder.

And I made a huge pot so lots of it has ended up in the freezer. Yeah, I'll have Hot Stuff for months to come. It should go great with brown rice.

Know Your Peppers!
Mood:: 'satisfied' satisfied
minoanmiss: world's oldest olive tree, in Crete. (Minoan Tree)
posted by [personal profile] minoanmiss at 04:48pm on 2025-11-23
Mood:: 'creative' creative
siderea: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] siderea at 05:16am on 2025-11-23 under ,
Saw this, blew my mind, thought I'd share. Behold, Lençóis Maranhenses:



2025 Oct 28: PBS Terra [pbsterra on YT]: It Looks Like a Desert. But It Has Thousands of Lakes

When I heard in the video how big it was, I turned on satellite view in Google Maps and popped "Lençóis Maranhenses" into the search bar:

Image below cut. Content advisory: trypophobes avoid )
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Today I was busy until past 10 pm attending a pinball tournament and then having dinner so please, instead, enjoy a double dose of Musée des Arts Forains pictures.

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More of pinball's ancestors here, with bagatelles where you try to shoot a ball around the obstacles.


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And isn't that a fun obstacle, shooting through the legs of a jester-y type?


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One of the attractions was a big roller-ball-racing game, dating all the way back to the 1970s (whimper). Everyone got a chance to roll balls in one of two races.


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The docent explains the rules. [personal profile] bunnyhugger would come within a whisker of winning. When I got my turn, I was in no danger of winning.


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Another picture of the floor here in the first building. On the left is a gondola like you'd find on a salon carousel.


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Seeing the promise of The Original Marvelous Mechanicals put us in mind of Marvin's, of course.


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Cat figure on one of the carousels we got to ride. This was on a multi-level carousel that went very slowly but, as you can see from the floor, looked almost oppressively deluxe.


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Looking over [personal profile] bunnyhugger's shoulder at the mermaid serving as a central figure. You can see a woman sitting on a mere bench reading the guide pamphlet.


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We've been on a couple carousels with more than one level before, such as at Denver's Lakeside Park, but few with steps that look like they belong in an early-20th-century luxury hotel.


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Out the door we saw the occasional cat walking by.


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A look at the central platform and the inner ring of benches.


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A game, here, your classic toss-the-ball-in-the-mouth game. I think there's something French people would recognize about these figures, but I don't.


Trivia: The gold-colored United States dollar coin issued from 1999 was made of 88.5% copper, alloyed with zinc (6%), manganese (3.5%), and nickel (2%), with each coin costing about 13 cents to make. Source: Nature's Building Blocks: An A-Z Guide to the Elements, John Emsley. By the time of the book's writing (the book is copyright 2001, so this can't have been later than mid-2000) about fifty had been minted for every person in the United States.

Currently Reading: The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Kevin Baker. I really am enjoying this read a lot. I'm just finding so little time to read.

November 22nd, 2025
twistedchick: watercolor painting of coffee cup on wood table (Default)
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Pausing a moment from things directly about my life, there's a scandal going on in the competitive pinball world. It says a lot about when I got into the competitive pinball scene that my first reaction to learning of it was ``thank goodness it's not Michigan this time''; the state used to have an outsized reputation for causing Drama. But this drama is more about an unfolding sad mess rather than things you can look and snicker about from the safety of being uninvolved.

In short: at a North Carolina pinball contest, one of the venue staff decided --- against the explicit direction of the tournament organizers and the venue owner --- that she was going to be the Vagina Inspector. This chased off a nonzero number of transgender people from the event, and disrupted things for everyone else.

The International Flipper Pinball Association, the body that sanctions competitive-pinball tournaments, ruled that the venue would not have any sanctioned events for twelve months and would be subject to annual reviews until they were confident it was an open, welcoming place for all players. Okay enough there. But they also ruled that the tournament, broken as it was, would be allowed to stand as a sanctioned event. They did not ask, particularly, the IFPA Women's Advisory Board, set up to provide guidance on how to make pinball events less misogynist, their opinion before this quick ruling.

And the IFPA has responded to criticism of this like a cishet guy being told for the first time that ``gyp'' is a racial slur. Insisting they have made their decision, it's not going to be altered, and if you bring it up in the IFPA Discord you're banned.

The sympathetic reading to this is that they want to avoid the precedent that if someone hollers loud enough they'll de-sanction anything. It's easy to see how the malicious will abuse that, and there's few things with as much malice as a transphobe who's noticed a project to combat sexism. So far as I know, and I am getting all my juicy gossip secondhand as I'm not in the IFPA Discord, nobody has actually said this, though. And it is hard to distinguish the actions taken from what someone who didn't actually care but wanted the fuss to go away would do. The resignation of the entire Women's Advisory Board suggests what they, people in closer touch with the IFPA management than most, believe.

So it's an enormous mess with a lot of people threatening to quit the IFPA, or at least asking what it's good for. Mostly, from the player point of view, it's a way of getting sanctioned events which draw players to them, in the hopes of winning renown for their play.

At one point [personal profile] bunnyhugger said there was talk of a schism, breaking off a new sanctioning body. There's no reason in principle there couldn't be one. But the IFPA does have a considerable lead in having a lot of people already registered, and a rating system in place and tried by experience. Also a lot of personal ties with Stern, the one big maker of pinball games, as well as with the second-tier makers like Jersey Jack (and don't let's get started on that) or Spooky Pinball or American Pinball. (The lack of separation between the makers of pinball games, the organizers of tournaments, the judges of tournaments, and competitors has been a minefield competitive pinball has so far not set off.) The practical objections might be insurmountable, unless the organization really does fracture along some natural fault line.

Mercifully this hasn't required [personal profile] bunnyhugger to take a big stand yet. It does suggest that we need to do a little prodding around to see if there've been problems people haven't been willing to bring up, though, and that won't be happy to learn.


Now, venturing into the Musée des Arts Forains, during our little layover in Paris.

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Some of the many exhibits there, including a (Bayol, I assume) rabbit leaping above them all.


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And hey, pinball! At least, one of the ancestors of pinball, where you roll the ball into holes for points. These are about the length of a dinner table.


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And here's a rabbit posed over a heck of a garden vase.


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Ooh, hey, what's this? When did we get to a Middle Eastern castle?


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Ah, there we go, it's an elaborate model displaying some street scene. Oh, but wait ... computer, zoom out.


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There we go! It's an elaborate miniature street scene riding the back of an elephant!


Trivia: In 1645 Blaise Pascal introduced his Pascaline mechanical-addition machine in a pamphlet entitled Advis Nécessaire à ceux qui auront curiosité de voir la machine arithmétique, et de s'en server (Advice necessary for those who will be curious to see the arithmetic machine, and to use it). The last paragraph directed orders to Sieur de Roberval, a resident of Paris, who could provide demonstrations. Source: Empire of the Sum: The Rise and Reign of the Pocket Calculator, Keith Houston.

Currently Reading: The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Kevin Baker.

November 21st, 2025
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
posted by [personal profile] redbird at 07:21pm on 2025-11-21 under ,
I picked up my new glasses today, and I like them. I am seeing better than with the old glasses, either because it's a slightly different prescription, because the old pair had gotten scratched, or some combination.

A few hours later, the lenses have gotten smudged, so I am going to clean them after posting this.

I stopped on the way home at New City Microcreamery, which now has a branch in Arlington Center, half a block from the optician's. After tasting a few flavors, I bought a pint of dairy cinnamon ice cream for myself, and a pint of vegan peanut butter for [personal profile] adrian_turtle, at her request.
malada: bass guitar (Default)
posted by [personal profile] malada at 03:05pm on 2025-11-21
Back when I was still at work someone left a plastic bag of peppers in the give-away table. I was hankering to make some chili and snagged them at the end of the day. They were small orange and red peppers - about a dozen each. Knowing the locals I thought they might be a variety of sweet Italian peppers. I eventually tossed the bag in the freezer to make chili (with lots of beans) another day.

That day was today. Yeah, I was hoping that I'd make a nice spicy batch this time.

I've handled green, red and yellow sweet peppers without issue. I've even cut up Jalapeño peppers without an issue - but I got half way through cutting up these guys and my fingers started burning. OMG. Hand washing did little to stop the burn. I could only stand to wash in cold water. I ended up using only a quarter of the peppers in the chili. I washed my hands again and again, soaked my hands in oat milk (it was cold so it helped) and then applying aloe. It's been about 3 hours since I chopped up the peppers and my finger don't burn but they hurt.

I did an internet search and I think they were Habanero and or cherry peppers. The chili smells scorching. I'm just letting it simmer right now. I think tomorrow I'll go get a few more cans of beans to dilate the chili a bit more.

Learned my lesson - always identify your peppers before cooking. Feel free to laugh at my silly mistake.

I just hope the chili's not too spicy. I like a good chili but not if it burns both ways.
Mood:: 'surprised' surprised
vvalkyri: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] vvalkyri at 12:39pm on 2025-11-21
I keep meaning to write about a play I went to last Saturday. November 4. It's about the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin by Settler Yigal Amir 30 years ago, and it's a musical. It's not a particularly good musical but it is a very worthwhile production, and I spent at least the last 10 minutes in tears.

Because Yigal Amir's one action, thinking he was a hero... is the turn point for everything since, and honestly including our current national nightmare and how increasingly unsafe it is for Jews around the world *and here.* One person did so much damage.

There's showtimes through December 7th. Thursday through Sunday. Different talks after each; ours was Combatants For Peace. It's at a church on 16th near U and only like $25, and it is worth going to.

I should sort of scan the program but I also need to start getting moving towards Pittsburgh.

Sometime other than now, I might write about yesterday's blood libel at Union Station, and how that means I'm leaving earlier for Pitt Stop.

What also sucks is there's chats I'd love to mention this in but it would likely result in accusations of WrongThink.

https://www.voicesfestivalproductions.com/nov4-themusical
minoanmiss: Minoan Lady walking down a mountainside from a 'peak sanctuary' (Lady at Mountain-Peak Sanctuary)
posted by [personal profile] minoanmiss at 12:10pm on 2025-11-21
Mood:: 'cynical' cynical
sabotabby: (doom doom doom)
posted by [personal profile] sabotabby at 06:54am on 2025-11-21 under
 This has been a great week for podcasts, which I'm sure will spill into next week as I'm still catching up. And in particular I'm on a pre-modern history kick. So what's more fun than adding dragons to that? Wizards & Spaceships' "How To Write a Kickass Fantasy Battle ft. Suzannah Rowntree" looks at the myths and truths behind medieval warfare and how you can apply those to fantasy writing. Inspired by the research she had to do for her own novels, which are historical fantasy, and Russia's war on Ukraine, Suzannah wrote an accessible guide to writing battles for those of us who will probably never set foot in a war zone. She talks about who gets it right, who gets it wrong, and why you shouldn't leave your comfy castle during a siege.
siderea: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] siderea at 03:09am on 2025-11-21 under
The Bostoniensis household's last grocery order included some cucumbers but the delivery service mystifyingly substituted for them a head of cabbage. They were very apologetic when Mr B called to complain, and refunded us the price of the cabbage, so now it's a free cabbage. But it's still here taking up a remarkably large volume of space in our fridge, what with the spherical thing, and it's a week before Thanksgiving.

Cooking a cabbage was not on our plans for this week. But throwing out a perfectly good cabbage seems sad. And I have been complaining about not getting enough veggies to eat. So.

Anybody have a very delicious recipe for cabbage that conforms to the following parameters?:

• Cooked. No raw cabbage.

• Really, really low effort. I am resigned to having to chop the cabbage itself, but maybe minimal other chopping of other veggies or meats. Something where the actual cooking isn't too fussy.

• Not haluski. We love haluski. We have most of the ingredients for haluski. We do not have the time or energy for taking on a project like haluski.

• Not stuffed cabbage. The kind with ground beef and tomato sauce. Neither of us likes it. Possibly because we don't like the taste of cabbage in tomato sauce.

• Not corned beef and cabbage. We love corned beef and cabbage but omg have you seen the price of brisket.

• Relately, maybe no stewing or slow cooking? The smell of slow cooking the corned beef and cabbage is dire, and we don't want to have to flush air we paid to heat. Maybe it would be okay if more heavily seasoned.

• Gotta mostly be cabbage. We have a lot of cabbage to get through.

We like spicy, though it's not required; no cilantro, and probably no coconut. Main dish or side, with meat or without.

Edit: Okay, maybe we'll just buy more cabbages. I am very excited by this harvest of recipes.
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

The past week on my humor blog featured a weird density of me remembering things, and you won't guess what's scheduled for tomorrow. So why not pause for what's been this past week through to today?


And now to our trip to France and Belgium! Coming up, my first picture on another continent.

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You must recognize this iconic Paris setting, right? No? ... Well, it's just off the Metro near the carousel museum we went to while waiting for a train.


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Through this passageway we ... got a little closer to the place we meant to go. We were pretty sure.


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And here we are, the Musée des Arts Forains. The carousel centaur leaps over the entrance. I don't think this is a Boer War general but can you say for sure it's not?


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The entrance corridor. The museum itself is past this in the green space there. The kid was just there. P1080557.jpeg

Trio of horses lining the entry way while we gathered for the guided tour (the only kind offered).


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The horses seen from the side, which the light makes look completely different.


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And here's the start of the tour. The guide here was far more energetic and dramatic than we could have imagined and, despite this being a French-only tour, she kept giving us and a couple other English speakers short versions of what she was saying in the native tongue that didn't seem any shorter, really.


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Tucked into many of the upper windows were busts of various figures. You know, people you expect to see busts of in a private French museum of carousel and fairground attractions, like past presidents of France.


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Or here, Jimmy Carter and Mick Jagger, naturally.


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Hidden in the trees were a number of figures too, some of them doing festive things like here playing a trumpet in a parade.


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And here's a figure that seems too off-model to be an off-model Bugs Bunny, by a timepiece that suggests they're also badly mispainted to be the White Rabbit.


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And now, into the museum! It was dim, of course, and I didn't yet have experience with how to take dark photos on this camera, although in this case it worked out perfectly.


Trivia: 16,508 truck loads of debris were carried away from the Empire State Building site before construction began. Source: Higher: A Historic Race to the Sky and the Making of a City, Neal Bascomb. That precision is extremely believable, yes.

Currently Reading: The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Kevin Baker.

November 20th, 2025
cellio: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] cellio at 07:24pm on 2025-11-20 under , , , , ,

I tried a new-to-me CSA this year, Who Cooks For You Farm. The summer share (which we got biweekly) was great, so I signed up for fall (weekly) which started this week. Their produce is very good, the prices are fair, and the people are very helpful and friendly. When we suddenly needed to leave town the day before a pickup (out-of-town funeral), they changed it for me. They don't do a winter share, alas, but maybe someday? Anyway, if you're in Pittsburgh and looking for a CSA, I recommend this one.

Related to this, any suggestions for ways to use watermelon radish other than raw in salads and roasted? It turns out that if you pickle it, while it tastes fine, the colors run and it no longer looks like little slices of watermelon.

In principle, the Internet is built on open, decentralized protocols. But in reality, an awful lot of the modern Internet depends on some key chokepoints. I found Cloudflare's post-mortem of Tuesday's outage fascinating and very well-done; most companies either don't publish reports like these or skimp on the details, but this one explains what happened and how red herrings made recovery harder. (Their service and the off-site status page went down at the same time; it was reasonable to suspect a coordinated attack, though it turned out to be a coincidence.) I feel for the team.

Today we got a notification from our local water utility about replacing lead pipes. They need our permission to replace the pipe connecting the main to our house, because part of it is on our property. They'll fix the sidewalk, but if they damage anything else, that's on us. Technically we can say no -- but if we do, they shut off our water. Um, great. We actually tested our water several years ago and the lead levels are well within acceptable parameters; left alone, we wouldn't do anything. But they're forcing the issue and I'm not sure why. (If there were bad test results, that would be different.) So, somebody will come by the week after next to look at our meter and plumbing and tell us what's going to happen. Joy.

I am now studying talmud, weekly and separately, with two different rabbis, neither of them my new rabbi. Earlier this year I also got connected to a Chabad Rosh Chodesh group (women only), which has been very nice. I love how interconnected the local community is. :-)

My new congregation continues to be a great fit.

I backed the Kickstarter for Kavango, a board game that we play a lot. The Kickstarter for an expansion is ending soon; I'm usually not a fan of game expansions, but this one looks solid, enhancing the game without making it more complicated or adding to the play length, so I backed it. (You can get the original game as a backer, too.)

We've been playing a lot of other games too. Terraforming Mars continues to be a favorite, including with one expansion (Preludes). Other expansions we've seen are not so appealing, though I'm interested in the alternate maps (other side of the planet).

A recently-published master's thesis on Stack Exchange's alienation of their core community and community responses was fascinating reading. I might have more to say about that later.

I am appalled by some of the shenanigans coming from the federal government of late, and that is about all I have the energy to say about it for now.

minoanmiss: Nubian Minoan Lady (Nubian Minoan Lady)
minoanmiss: Nubian girl with dubious facial expression (dubious Nubian girl)
minoanmiss: Maiden holding a quince (Quince Maiden)
posted by [personal profile] minoanmiss at 03:25pm on 2025-11-20
Mood:: 'dazzled' dazzled
posted by [syndicated profile] revlyncox_feed at 09:25am on 2025-11-20

skinnerhousebooks:

A Prayer for My Queer and Trans Siblings

Here you are.
Here, in this holy space,
on this ground that is holy
because you are here.

Here you are, in flesh and bone,
filling up this body that belongs to you alone.
Your pumping heart is a wonder
because it keeps you alive.
Your loving heart is a blessing
because it keeps all of us alive.

The Spirit of Love has a home in you.
May we all see that love in you
and let our hearts become mirrors
for the compassion at your core.

The Spirit of Justice has a home in you.
May we light our wicks
from one another until we are all aflame,
until we burn out every prejudice
we carry in these bones.

Here you are.
Holy as you are.

Blessed be.

Jess Reynolds
Love Like Thunder

minoanmiss: Minoan lady holding a bright white star (Lady With Star)
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Back to Closing Day at Cedar Point, with a guest. As mentioned the weather was just nice enough, and the staff just short enough, that everything was closed or crowded.

Worse, though, is that MWS started to feel pained, and went back to my car to sit a while and drink ice water while painkillers tried to do something for him. We couldn't think how awful it would be to have the first trip to Cedar Point in years have the center knocked out like that. (And he's had similar problems before, one day at Kings Island being knocked out when he was nauseated after an hour or two and had to go back to the hotel room to sleep for hours.) [personal profile] bunnyhugger worried that the day was a bust, but I kept my usual optimistic self and insisted that it was going to be fine. If nothing else it was going to be a day at Cedar Point, what's terrible about that?

And after about 6 pm the crowds did seem to be diminishing, with the line to Top Thrill 2 looking short enough to be worth trying out. So we did, stuffing all our things into the same locker and everyone relying on me to remember the number (I could remember where it was but had to reverse-engineer the number from that). And got into a line that didn't look much longer than what we'd had during our Halloweekends visit; we might have time to ride both this and Siren's Curse. Then the ride went down.

A good number of people jumped out of line ahead of us, but they never played the ride-is-closed-for-the-rest-of-the-day announcement. No real word will ever go out about how long they expect the problem to be, but we were heartened when a train loaded with people did go out and ride successfully. That turned out to just be discharging the people who were already loaded up and there was more maintenance to do. We kept an eye on the clock and on the eventually launched test trains and were on the brink of leaving when they announced the ride was open again, to great applause.

Then, of course, the Fast Lane --- which had been empty --- filled up, probably with parkgoers who saw the ride had been closed and had a minimal line-cutter's wait. So our wait kept on waiting. Finally the 8:00 closing hour passed. We would get one ride on this, our one roller coaster of the day, and that only if the ride didn't go down again.

It did not. We got up to the station finally, where as usual the ride operator was assigning seats. Within limits: he offered the people in front of us the choice of front seat or back on the next train. They picked back. So he gave the three of us rows one and two. Front seat. We both deferred to MWS for the front row; we'll likely have more chances for a front-seat ride than he will, for next year at least. I tried to defer the other front seat to [personal profile] bunnyhugger, but she took the second row, so, there I was, having my first front-seat ride on a coaster of this size since, probably, that time at Great Adventure we got to ride Kingda Ka (RSVP) repeatedly at the end of that night.

Top Thrill 2 does not have the single acceleration of the original Top Thrill. But it does have three linear induction accelerations, and a nice long hang after the reverse one, peering down hundreds of feet and, for me this time, nothing obstructing my view but the track. And when we crested the top hat it felt again like we were being pitched out of our seats --- no seat belts, by the way; the restraints are just that cozy and good --- and could see the whole park, closing up, in the darkness. Then a rocket back down and a brake to a stop and applauding for what a fantastic ride that was.

We staggered off the ride --- the ride photos booth was unattended and it turns out you can't just buy a ride photo anymore anyway --- before remembering that we had to get our stuff out of our locker. And then we also had to get MWS's milestone photograph. We had all forgotten to get a sheet of paper with 100 on it, but he was able to type out 100 on his phone in a big typeface --- the thing I'm told the kids do --- and we got to the entrance of Top Thrill 2 for the scene. They had already turned off so many lights that our pictures came out lousy, unless we turned the flash on, in which case they came out lousy in a different way. Still, he reached his milestone, and on a quite good coaster, and from the front row, in a way that has a story behind it. Great stuff.

Still, it was a day that saw us ride only a couple of carousels, and the loaded-to-capacity(!) train from back of the park to the front, and one roller coaster, plus eat some cheese-on-a-stick and fries. It wasn't the good low-key riding bonanza we had been hoping for. Maybe opening weekend will be different.


Now? I have a couple scattered pictures from April and May as I tried to talk Motor City Furry Con's lost-and-found into acknowledging my existence and returning my camera. Not enough to be worth sharing, though. Instead, here's the first couple pictures with my brand-new used camera, and I bet you can guess what's first on that new photo roll.

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It's Athena! Who doesn't see what the point of this thing shoved in her face is.


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With the flash you get to see her eye color and her concern that I'm covering part of the flash rectangle with my finger.


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There we go, that's a slightly better camera flash. Yes, her food dish reads DOG.


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She went upstairs in her hutch and sprawled out where she could look disapprovingly at me.


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Got a little closer and got a slightly different look of 'what are you bothering me about?' picture.


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I turned off the flash and turned up the ISO and got a more naturalistic view of our all-black rabbit in her hutch.


Trivia: The longest animation strike in the United States was the May-December 1947 strike against Terry Toons. Source: Terrytons: The Story of Paul Terry and His Classic Cartoon Factory, W Gerald Hamonic.

Currently Reading: The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Kevin Baker.

November 19th, 2025
minoanmiss: Minoan lady scribe holding up a recursive scroll (Scribe)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
posted by [personal profile] redbird at 06:45pm on 2025-11-19 under ,
Following up on my post from Monday: [personal profile] adrian_turtle talked to a different advisor (also with SHINE, like the person we talked to Monday).



He told her that "CommonHealth" is a Medigap plan, which you can only enroll in if you are under 65 and on Medicare because you're disabled. They don't require you to have less than X amount of money or income, but the premiums are based on a percentage of your income, and for us would be significantly less than a standard Medigap plan. He urged her to apply by printing the form and sending it in with a cover letter saying that this is a CommonHealth application, because otherwise they might treat it as a MassHealth application, which is not what we'd be looking for.

Edited to add: the only part of this information that's relevant for me right now is the "special election period"--because I inherited money this year, while I could enroll in CommonHealth, it wouldn't save money and might cost more than a standard Medigap policy. I have made a calendar entry to check in one year, and in two years, to see if it makes sense then.

Standard Medicare Open Enrollment ends on Dec. 7th, making this seem urgent--especially if we want to trust it to the post office--but I remembered that the letter saying my current Medicare Advantage plan won't be offered next year said I therefore have more time to choose a new plan.

So, I opened a chat window at Medicare.gov, and ran into a weird bit of terminology. Open enrollment ends on Dec. 7th, but I have a "special election period" from Dec. 8 to the end of February. The agent wanted to make clear that if I don't choose a plan by Dec. 31st, I wouldn't have Part D drug coverage or a Medicare Advantage plan.

I then asked if the special election period also applied to Medigap, and they told me that Medigap doesn't have annual open enrollment, if you don't buy it within six months after starting on Medicare the private insurance companies don't have to sell it to you. At that point, I thanked him and said that Massachusetts has different rules, and I think I need to talk to someone from the state.
mrs_sweetpeach: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] mrs_sweetpeach at 11:56am on 2025-11-19 under
location: My home office
Mood:: 'satisfied' satisfied
minoanmiss: Naked young fisherman with his catch (Minoan Fisherman)
sabotabby: (books!)
posted by [personal profile] sabotabby at 06:44am on 2025-11-19 under
Just finished: Kalivas! Or, Another Tempest by Nick Mamatas. This was excellent—basically what I said last week, then it gets super weird at the end (much like Girls Against God did, except that unlike that one, I enjoyed the more narratively straightforward first three quarters of the book). I'm not educated enough to know if there are other authors besides, say, Silvia Federici, who really explore Prospero-as-colonizer, but I do think Nick might be the only one to tie that to a cyberpunk future, in particular our cyberpunk present where dystopia is driven primarily by billionaires' fear of death and fantasies of immortality. Which is to say there's a lot going on in this little book and you should check it out.

Currently reading: To Leave a Warrior Behind: The Life and Stories of Charles R. Saunders, the Man Who Rewrote Fantasy by Jon Tattrie. You ever read a bio of someone you've never heard of? It's an interesting experience. It's kind of shameful that I hadn't heard of Charles R. Saunders until his induction into the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame this year, but that's kind of the point—he died broke and unknown and was buried in an unmarked grave before his friends and fans figured out where he was and crowdfunded a memorial. He was a Black author and journalist from the US who fled the draft and eventually settled in Halifax, and he pioneered the genre of sword and soul, which is Conan-inspired stories set in fantasy Africa. Again. Hadn't heard of it. Tattrie worked with and was friends with Saunders (he was one of the aforementioned crowdfunders) so Saunders' life story is interwoven with Tattrie's investigation into what happened to him and why. He also gets a big assist from Charles de Lint (!!) who kept all of the many letters that Saunders wrote to him. I am reading this for podcast-related reasons but I'm genuinely fascinated by this story and will probably check out Saunders' novels based on this if I can find them.
siderea: (Default)
Canonical link: https://siderea.dreamwidth.org/1886696.html

Hey, Americans and other people stuck in the American healthcare system. It's open enrollment on the state exchanges, and possibly through your employer, so I wanted to give you a little heads up about preventive care and shopping for a health insurance plan.

I've noticed from time to time various health insurance companies advertising themselves to consumers by boasting that their health plans focus on covering preventive care. Maybe they lay a spiel on you about how they believe in keeping you healthy rather than trying to fix problems after they happen. Maybe they point out in big letters "PREVENTIVE CARE 100% FREE" or "NO CO-PAYS FOR PREVENTIVE CARE".

When you come across a health insurance product advertised this way, promoted for its coverage of preventive health, I propose you should think of that as a bad thing.

Why? Do I think preventive medicine is a bad thing? Yes, actually, but that's a topic for another post. For purposes of this post, no, preventive medicine is great.

It's just that it's illegal for them not to cover preventive care 100% with no copays or other cost-sharing.

Yeah, thanks to the Obamacare law, the ACA, it's literally illegal for a health plan to be sold on the exchanges if it doesn't cover preventive care 100% with no cost-sharing, and while there are rare exceptions, it's also basically illegal for an employer to offer a health plan that doesn't cover preventive care.

They can't not, and neither can any of their competitors.

So any health plan that's bragging on covering preventive care?.... Read more [2,270 words] )

This post brought to you by the 220 readers who funded my writing it – thank you all so much! You can see who they are at my Patreon page. If you're not one of them, and would be willing to chip in so I can write more things like this, please do so there.

Please leave comments on the Comment Catcher comment, instead of the main body of the post – unless you are commenting to get a copy of the post sent to you in email through the notification system, then go ahead and comment on it directly. Thanks!
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Small but long-running pinball tournament tonight, so before I give you the last pictures of Motor City Furry Con and my last pictures before going camera-less-except-for-my-iPod, please pause and ask yourself What's Going On In Mark Trail? What is with this tiger cult thing? And when you're satisfied you know what's happened from August - November 2025 in that strip, go on to read this:

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Minimally arty shot looking out the window at the pond that's always there and just a little enhanced now.


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The directional sign that's been with the convention through three hotels and I assume will be back in February for a fourth. Also the paid refreshments stand the hotel set up for people who needed more than hospitality's popcorn, Faygo, and beer.


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Some fursuiters hanging out in the bar while everyone agrees it's probably too lousy to drive home.


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The two games in hospitality: Pattie Cakes is a whack-a-mole-style game, just hitting whatever the lit button is. And Surfers, the pinball game, was down all day that we saw.


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Mysterious list of numbers on a piece of cardboard attached to Surfers. The steadily ascending nature suggests high scores, although a score of 14,619 would take forever to do.


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The Dead Dog Dance started maybe an hour late, and ran short (the deadline to start cleaning up was unchangeable even for acts of god), but it did start.


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Fursuiter with a pride flag at the dance.


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[personal profile] bunnyhugger posed all dramatically on the dance floor.


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Though Discord and Telegram and such have taken over communicating with folks at the convention, they still had a wall of post-it-notes for people who needed, and it turned into art.


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The tunnel to the dealers den had this tent that, we found, was fully closed up. Since nothing particular was under there I don't know what the closing up did. Maybe kept the space dry for things being moved from the outbuilding into the hotel.


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The big schedule by the stairwell was removed, one more stroke of the convention being over.


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And the ... toucan puffin? ... waves goodbye. End of con and shortly after this I left my camera in, probably, a bathroom and wouldn't see it again for months.


Trivia: After the Gemini IX Agena target vehicle crashed into the Atlantic Ocean rather than reach orbit, the very first production model, number 5001, which had been rejected early in the program as too trouble-ridden, was refurbished and used for the final, Gemini XII, launch. Source: On The Shoulders of Titans: A History of Project Gemini, Barton C Hacker, James M Grimwood. NASA SP-4203.

Currently Reading: The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Kevin Baker.

November 18th, 2025
mrs_sweetpeach: (Default)
location: My home office
Mood:: 'hopeful' hopeful
malada: bass guitar (Default)
posted by [personal profile] malada at 10:29am on 2025-11-18 under
I'm still a bit of a space nut (I stayed up to watch the moon landing) and I'm happy Jeff Bezo's rocket made it to orbit AND the booster landed safely.

I still think he's a flaming asshole for treating his workers like dirt but giant booster lands safely? Good deal!

I have to admit Musk's giant rocket launches are more exciting as they tend to explode more, half the reason for Musk's launches are to send up his Star Link sats. They're the compact fluorescence light bulbs of internet access - an intermediary step towards a better technology. They'll reach everywhere true but laying optical cable is better: it's laid once and it's good, it will last for decades and the prices are coming down. Musk's satellites? Die in a few years and then pollute the upper atmosphere. And there are a _lot_ of them. To get gamer latency they need to be in low earth orbit and that means they get dragged down by the atmosphere within a short period of time. Wasteful. Dangerous. There's too much orbital crap up there already.

I'm rooting for the Neutron rocket from Space Labs. Go Kiwi!
Mood:: 'hopeful' hopeful
minoanmiss: Minoan lady holding a bright white star (Lady With Star)
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Our big Halloweekends trip was not our last visit to Cedar Point for the year. We had figured to go Sunday, the 2nd of November for closing day. And we brought a friend along, MWS, who's been becalmed at a mere 99 roller coasters on his record ever since the 2019 road trip when both Altoona's Leap the Dips (the oldest roller coaster still standing) and Kennywood's Steel Curtain were down. He's had some tight budgets lately, but we had free Cedar Point tickets from Michigan's Adventure, offered as compensation for that park cancelling its Halloween events. So he could come in for nothing more than the inconvenience of meeting up at a park-and-ride. That park-and-ride is now hidden behind a complicated new traffic circle-plus-extra-cilia arrangement but it's not too much a price to pay.

The night before [personal profile] bunnyhugger noticed something in the fine print of the tickets: that they were good until the 1st of November. We were going the 2nd of November. Some research found that Saturday, the 1st of November, had been the scheduled close of the season up to a couple months before when the last day was added. I supposed that whoever was in charge of the schedule at Cedar Point failed to communicate this change to the person in charge of make-good tickets at Michigan's Adventure and everything would be fine. Even if the ticket-scanners at the gate had some issue with it, by the time we got to the park a couple hours into the day, they would have had enough people coming in with ``expired'' make-good tickets that they'd know what to do, and that would be to let people in, since the entire point of the tickets is to make people feel good about the chain after a disappointment.

[personal profile] bunnyhugger checked online, finding in Michigan's Adventure or Cedar Point forums that many people were very confident that of course the ticket would not be redeemable on the 2nd of November, what kind of doorknob are you? But could not find anyone who had actually asked anyone connected with the park. Well, as you might have expected, there was no trouble getting into the park; the ticket scanned as if they had printed ``good until December 31, 2025'' on them. The only hitch was MWS approaching the gate noticing the fine-print date and wondering if that was going to be a problem. I pretended I hadn't noticed it before. After getting through the gate without issue [personal profile] bunnyhugger explained that we had seen it, but figured not to tell him about it if we could because there was no sense worrying him if it wasn't needed.

And she took a moment to report back to the forums of very confident people that the ticket was no trouble at all.

Past experience has been that Closing Day, especially after Halloween, is a good one for riding. Past experience failed us here. Maybe it was the pretty decent weather, and the park having been (by reports) a ghost town on Halloween itself. But the park was busy, not helped by a lot of rides being closed. This included some roller coasters like Corkscrew and Gemini and Blue Streak that can handle a hundred thousand riders every fifteen minutes being closed. I assume that's staffing issues. Derby Dogs was also closed, as was the booth where they sell pins. Also a bunch of the gift shops on the exit side of roller coasters.

But the evidence on the ground, and of the online queue reports, was that it was going to be a terrible riding day; even Magnum, which normally can handle any number of riders in at most fifteen minutes, had a line estimated at 45 minutes. While we got rides on the carousels easily enough there wasn't much to do for the roller coasters, especially any of the three that could be MWS's milestone hundredth coaster, except hope that the line was less bad later on.


I've been promising photos of Sunday at Motor City Furry Con 2025, and delivering, but now we're up to the most exciting yet least photographically interesting part of the event.

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So, a massive storm front rolled in, severe enough that tornado warnings sounded on everybody's phones and they shepherded everyone into the Main Events room as the largest tornado shelter in the hotel.


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It took a bit to get everything organized, particularly to get the whole remaining population of the convention in one room and also leave enough space that should a chandelier fall down people wouldn't be immediately killed.


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People hit on the idea of making chair circles to block off the most immediate danger zones, although it was hard for other people to resist grabbing a chair and sitting in comfort as the storm front rolled over Ypsilanti.


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For a while they had radar updates going on screen, but that stopped for reasons I don't know; possibly from the expectation that people might decide the radar doesn't look bad to them so they were done with sheltering.


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Somewhere around that last picture they announced that Main Events was officially a Headless Lounge, so that fursuiters could take their heads off without fear of being photographed breaking character, and I stopped taking pictures. Eventually the storm receded enough that they allowed us out; here's what the back of the hotel looked like. Note that, like, every chair is blown over outside.


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And then [personal profile] bunnyhugger had to get back to work as she'd hoped to use the couple hours between closing ceremonies and the Dead Dog Dance as a chance to finish some stuff for school. That was impossible to do for the hour or so of sheltering so, back to the grind.


Trivia: Portugal issued its first national stamps in 1852. The first stamps celebrating the nation's history were issued in 1894, commemorating the 500th anniversary of Henry the Navigator. Source: The Invention of Tradition, Editors Eric Hobsbawm, Terence Ranger.

Currently Reading: The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Kevin Baker.

November 17th, 2025
minoanmiss: Detail of a Minoan statuette of a worshipping youth (Statuette Youth)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
posted by [personal profile] redbird at 03:03pm on 2025-11-17 under ,
I just had a phone appointment with someone, funded by the state of Massachusetts, to help decide between basic Medicare plus a Medigap plan, or a Medicare Advantage plan. I have gotten some useful information, but am going to double-check everything, because in at least one case what she told me contradicts what the official Medicare.gov site says. It's a relatively minor point--the existence of a roommate discount for some Medigap plans--but I asked about which plans it applied to, and she said it doesn't exist.

The new and interesting information is that apparently, because I am under 65 and disabled, I'm eligible for a Medicaid plan, without an income limit. It's called CommonHealth, and seems to be part of the state's "Commonwealth Care." If I understand correctly, after Medicare paid 80% of a bill, it would cover the rest, but only at providers that take MassHealth.

If I got basic Medicare (parts A and B), a part D drug plan, and a Medigap plan, I could see any provider that takes Medicare, without worrying about what's in-network. However, a Medigap plan would cost significantly more than this CommonHealth thing.

Or, I could sign up for another Medicare Advantage plan. The advantage there is there are some that would cost no more than the Medicare Part B premium. The disadvantage is being limited to in-network providers unless I'm willing to pay significantly more for that service.

I thought the question was, is it worth $250-$300/month (Medigap + prescription coverage) more to not have to worry about being in-network and prior authorization. It sounds like this CommonHealth plan would cost significantly less per month, but if the provider doesn't take MassHealth, I'd be paying 20%. Which gets back to the larger problem that there's no way to find out what number that will be 20% until after the visit.

If I understood correctly, all these options have copays for some things, and CommonHealth may require prior authorization for some things.
Mood:: confused
minoanmiss: Nubian girl with dubious facial expression (dubious Nubian girl)
minoanmiss: Minoan woman holding two snakes (House snakes)
malada: bass guitar (Default)
posted by [personal profile] malada at 09:43am on 2025-11-17
My alarm clock is OFF. Life is good.

My sleep schedule is still a mess. I have a hard wake up at 5 AM - which I've had for many years. I've decide to get up, get breakfast, do laundry if needed then go back to bed.

*Falling* asleep is still an issue.

But I've got plenty to do. Some things I initial don't want to do until I start in on them, then thing go well. Writing, making music, doing my YouTube videos - the initial ramp up is hard (because I'd rather lie around and read) but once I start I can flow.

I have to do adulting today - checking my retirement accounts. I prefer a hands off approach - have a general scheme and let my paid professionals worry about the details. I've got a meeting with them this week so I'd best be prepared. Changes will probably have to be made so I'd best be aware of things before I walk in.

Stay warm folks and release the Epstein Files.
Mood:: 'content' content
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

What else to say for Sunday of our Cedar Point Halloweekends trip ... well, we got a ride on Magnum, the last of the roller coasters we'd needed for the trip. Also to ride on Calypso, a twirling ride much like a Scrambler but on a tilted platform, and from a vantage point where we could see the Skeleton Crew doing their acrobatics routine from the side, making it look novel again.

Also we got to see whatever the heck was the Peanuts show, the one cancelled for want of a Snoopy understudy(?) the other day. It was something about trick-or-treating and Snoopy's wild candy mania and the scary house at the end of the block with the Legally Distinct From Willy Wonka And Besides She's A Woman So There.

Also we saw something we'd have expected never to see: Derby Dogs, a hot dog and walking taco stand next to the Derby Racer, was open. Cedar Point, like any big amusement park, has more refreshment stands than it has staff for on any day, but I couldn't swear that I had ever seen it open before, and word on the forums is that no, it's just like never open. Given the staffing shortages they seem to be enduring, I don't know why Derby Dogs was open this of all days, but there it was. We didn't eat there --- nothing vegetarian even if we hadn't just had lunch --- but my photos of the phenomenon also show nobody in line.

Another thing we finally did was get to a show, this one at the Jack Aldrich Theater which we hadn't seen used for Halloweekends shows in a couple years. The theme this year was something about mutants putting on a rave, and they opened with a couple great tricks of the performers interacting with the screen and lighting effects --- like, having a bubble appear around them and swinging a hand to crack it --- and then otherwise carrying on as if it were a furry convention's dance. The only strange thing was not clearing the theater to the tune of Toto's ``Africa''.

I've conveyed already the sad news of breaking my Angel kigurumi; after we dealt with that we got a ride on the Antique Autos, and Blue Streak again, and even saw one of the other live performances, an extremely loud skeleton-themed band on the Bonewalk. These the sign explained were The Ska-Letons, a name I know [personal profile] bunnyhugger didn't see because she would have groaned at the wordplay.

For our last ride of the night, and of Halloweekends, we went back to Siren's Curse for another night ride, again beautiful especially in the settling evening, as most everything else in the park closed up. My photograph timer suggests we wrapped up about 8:30, a half-hour past close, and we did sadly have to hustle our way back to the car so we could drive home in time for our work the next morning.


Meanwhile, Sunday at Motor City Furry Con 2025, after closing ceremonies. Surely a bunch of average, calm, slightly-sad-for-the-parting-moments pictures with nothing remarkable to share, right? We'll just see ...

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Some kind of robot-y creation that I saw a couple times during the convention. After closing ceremonies was the best view I ever got. What the reason for it is, I know not.


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It folds up pretty easily into one of those strollers people use to carry loads of stuff around amusement parks, though.


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Afterward, fursuiters wait eagerly for people to take pictures of them.


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Here the fursuit's handler poses the Sims cursor above their head.


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Over in the bar we see the results of a veritable tail'splosion.


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And here's a picture of a piece of the post-closing-ceremonies schedule which was about to get blasted to smithereens.


Trivia: Around 1815 Joseph Henry, future pioneer of electromagnetism and first chancellor of the Smithsonian Institute, was a well-regarded member of Albany's Green Street Theatre, with the manager offering him a permanent, salaried engagement. Joseph had, according to his recollections, just discovered Professor George Gregory's 1808 Popular Lectures on Experimental Philosophy, Astronomy, and Chemistry, turning his interests to science. Source: Joseph Henry: The Rise of an American Scientist, Albert E Moyer.

Currently Reading: The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Kevin Baker.

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