cornerofmadness: by <lj user=jordannamorgan> (teaching fury)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness
Because dear sweet baby Jesus my students are challenging me. I had two lab finals today. For both I said DO NOT ASSUME YOU KNOW WHAT I'M ASKING. READ THE QUESTIONS. I pointed out like three times pre-exam that I could ask 1. What is this muscle 2. What is this origin/insertion 3. What is the muscle's action.

Not only are they putting muscle names in for actions (because they didn't read) and then because there is cardio on my nursing version of this those words are on the wordbank too and my upper level A&P students see those words and the question is what is the action of XYZ and they tell me mitral valve. How do you a) not know that's not an action (and this was MORE than 1 person) how do you know realize I have never once mention the fucking word mitral valve?!?


The second lab final today runs from 1-2:50. At 140 I get an email alert and it's one of my students who is MIA (I assumed she finally realized she can't possibly pass and didn't come, like one of the others did). I didn't hear my alarm and I overslept (it's nearly 2 pm....) I'm coming next week to make up the practical. No, you have an hour left on the exam. Be here or get a zero. She comes and from what she handed me was likely a zero anyhow. But She did have 2 hours because so many students (who didn't tell me they were coming friday at 1. THREE told me this and I had to get the secretary to get me more answer sheets. THIS is why I tell you to communicate with me.) my lab couldn't hold them all so they needed more time. I said they could have til 320. (that's an extra half hour). At 330 a dozen were still there. No, move on now. At 340 I demanded the tests back. If you don't know it after 3 hours then you don't know it.


Here me screaming as I yank out all my hair. Btw I feel justified in giving out a 23% to my upper levels because 4 out of 8 got 100%. It was far from impossible.

Bah, have the fannish 50 recs. I have been writing but it's all for [community profile] fandomtrees and I can't share it. I am really intrigued by the Hazbin prompts there. I will say that.

A Royal Idea Teen Wolf

Just A Man Torchwood


Self-Discovery FAKE


Melty. The Murderbot Diaries


Friends Old And New Torchwood

Dancing In The Dark Hazbin Hotel

just the beginning Hudson & Rex

What Everyone Wants Torchwood


A Heavy Burden The Fantastic Journey

No Such Thing As Too Late Supernatural

oh no, he’s hot. 陈情令 | The Untamed (TV)魔道祖师 - 墨香铜臭 | Módào Zǔshī - Mòxiāng Tóngxiù

hot chocolate icons

The List due South

Offer of Protection Teen Wolf

All Works Are In!

Dec. 5th, 2025 11:06 pm
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[personal profile] fic_in_a_box_mod posting in [community profile] ficinabox

Navigation: Rules/General Info | AO3 Collection | Posting Guidelines | Medium Rulesets | Google Forms (Defaulting, Extensions, Assignment Summary Requests) | Mod Contact: ficinaboxmod@gmail.com OR Screened Mod Contact Post

All Works Are In!

All pinch hits have been turned in, so we're on track to reveal tomorrow December 6th at 10 PM EST (countdown)!

Reminder:
  • The collection will be briefly closing to new works at 9PM EST, it will reopen at 10PM EST after reveals!
  • If you have any notes to the mods that you don't want to go live, remember to remove them.
  • You'll be able to edit all the way up until 10PM, even while the collection is closed.
  • Do not delete an approved work without telling the mods immediately. This includes treats or if you're replacing an approved work with a new one! If our work count is off, especially close to reveals, nothing will reveal until we identify the missing work.

Pinch Hitter Requests!

Some of the PHers who are making reveals happen are creators who are not signed up for the exchange, and some of them have posted requests for treats! There are currently 19 requests, 6 of which have at least one gift! There is no deadline for giving PHer gifts!

If you're looking for people to treat, don't forget to check the comments of the pinch hitter post (link)!

Reading Lists

Every year we do Reading Lists, which are lists of every work in the exchange separated by length and medium! Reading lists will likely begin in the afternoon of the 8th EST, and we'll post a schedule either on the 7th or 8th!

If you would not like to participate in the Reading Lists, please let us know!

Today's Cooking

Dec. 5th, 2025 10:40 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today I'm trying out a new recipe for Banana Banana Bread that I found in All Recipes.  This one uses 5 bananas where my usual one takes 3, and butter instead of oil.  I made half the flour whole wheat.  Partway through I realized there was no other flavoring besides the bananas, so I added a teaspoon of cinnamon.  It will be interesting to see how this turns out.  :D

Yawn...what am I doing?

Dec. 5th, 2025 10:57 pm
dewline: A fake starmap of the fictional Kitchissippi Sector (Sector)
[personal profile] dewline
I just realized that I have eight or nine different star mapping projects on the go with various members of the Tranquility Press gang.

All this has been building up over the last five years, partly to cope with other stuff and partly for fun and research giggles (which have been plentiful).

More as I think it over.

Activism

Dec. 5th, 2025 08:20 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Equality matters

When we say that we want equality, what do we mean? Same pay for everyone? Same caloric intake? Same size of house? Same amount of electricity consumed every day? Same amount of household waste? Same amount of political power, influence, or fame?

Read more... )

Assorted Stupidity #171

Dec. 6th, 2025 01:16 am
[syndicated profile] loweringthebar_feed

Posted by Kevin

LTB logo

  • TOP STORY: Kim Kardashian, who is famous for something, announced recently that she failed the California bar exam. She previously failed the so-called the “baby bar,” a multiple-choice test required for people who study law via apprenticeship instead of, you know, actually going to law school. Kardashian has supposedly been apprenticing for over six years now, and did pass the baby bar on her fourth try, but for now has gone no further. To be fair, the pass rate for the California bar exam is notoriously low, and many people have initially failed it but then gone on to become good lawyers. To be less fair, virtually all of those people had a law degree, which Kim Kardashian doesn’t, or at least a college degree, which Kim Kardashian also doesn’t.
  • Hey, did you know that ChatGPT’s Usage Policies strictly forbid using it for “suicide” or “self-harm”? They do. Did you know that some lawyers thought it would be a good idea to cite that as an affirmative defense to a wrongful-death complaint? They did. Let each of those things be a lesson to you.
  • Speaking of lessons, if you need a technical analysis of the load-bearing capacity of a noose or tips about how to “upgrade it into a safer load-bearing anchor loop,” ChatGPT can allegedly help you with that. Assuming you have some non-prohibited purpose for it, of course.
  • A co-founder of Crooked Beverage Company has been charged with felony theft for stealing more than $75,000 from the business, says this report. He took most of this after resigning from the company, a startup that sells fruit beverages that contain THC (or THC beverages that contain fruit, I don’t know). According to the report, the man “told investigators he took [the money] because he was ‘super pissed’ and believed he was owed” it, which isn’t a great defense.
  • The feds don’t need probable cause to conduct routine searches at the border (though you might be surprised to learn where they think “the border” is). But “nonroutine” searches must be based on “reasonable suspicion.” And while today’s DOJ is not to be trusted, agents probably did have what they needed to search Jesse Agus Martinez in October. According to this press release, “Martinez was diverted to secondary inspection after [a CBP officer] noticed a bulge in Martinez’s groin area.” Said bulge was not further described, but since it turned out to be a pair of “heavily sedated” orange-fronted parakeets—an endangered species—I am prepared to assume its appearance supported reasonable suspicion. Martinez allegedly “claimed several times that the bulge was his ‘pirrin,'” said to be Spanish slang for an object sometimes found in that area but typically not shaped like two parakeets. He was not believed.
  • A couple of good entries came in for the Comical Case Names page this week. The LTB Board of Directors, which is me, is currently considering whether one of them is too obscene to be included, even though it’s just the parties’ names. But Moon v. Satan, filed in D.C. on November 13, involves no such quandary. I also award bonus points on three grounds: (1) Satan is described as “a.k.a. ‘Lucifer da fallen Loser, a spiritual being … sued in his official capacity as Ruler of this World”; (2) the second named defendant is “Donald John Trump … sued in his official capacity as President of da United States of America”; and (3) the highly ornate red font used in the header of each page.
  • As you know, or should know, attempts to sue Satan or other “spiritual beings” typically fail for lack of jurisdiction or because the plaintiff has been unable to prove service of process on the defendant. That is likely to be the case here as well. At least for the first defendant on the list. Plaintiff presumably knows Trump’s address.

(no subject)

Dec. 5th, 2025 09:02 pm
thedarlingone: Christmas tree shape made of bright-colored swirls on white background (swirly xmas tree)
[personal profile] thedarlingone
Also if anybody should be looking to buy holiday gifts for internet friends, I do have an Amazon wishlist here. If you want to send me a holiday card (or gift through not-Amazon) and you've had my address before or we chat regularly, DM me and I'll be happy to get you my current information!

Economics

Dec. 5th, 2025 07:59 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
A Founder Got Fed Up With Potential Hires Using AI to ‘Fake It.’

Mollion says some job candidates have always misrepresented themselves, but AI has made the gap between presentation and reality even wider—making interviews and written materials even less reliable.

“On top of that, traditional interviews simply don’t reveal real skill, work style, responsiveness, or judgment,” Mollion told me. “People can say all the right things in an interview, but none of that guarantees how they actually perform on the job.”



I've been saying for years that brief resumes, college degrees, and office interviews offer very little indication of an applicant's actual ability to do a job.

Read more... )

Bandcamp Friday

Dec. 5th, 2025 07:25 pm
sabotabby: (possums)
[personal profile] sabotabby
 There are a few hours left in Bandcamp Friday. Instead of using Spotify, why not buy some music there? Coincidentally Grace Petrie has a new EP out.

(no subject)

Dec. 5th, 2025 07:01 pm
thedarlingone: black cat in front of full moon in dark blue sky (Default)
[personal profile] thedarlingone
Okay, tomorrow around 2pm US Eastern time I will be streaming the game "Jedi: Fallen Order" on my YouTube channel if anybody would like to come hang out in text chat? (The replay will also be available afterwards if you're interested but can't make it at that time.)

Dream Journal

Dec. 5th, 2025 06:46 pm
moon_custafer: neon cat mask (Default)
[personal profile] moon_custafer
Dreamt Jeff Bridges was the paterfamilias of a clan of actors/stunt/FX crew, who all had kind of a Western vibe even though hardly anyone makes Westerns anymore. Following a wild chase scene, I had to trackhi. down in a bar and talk him into coming back to help shoot the climactic scene of their latest gig, but he didn’t know me and had no reason to trust me.

After listening to my speech about how he should do it for the sake of his daughter (Fay Masterson), he went to the men’s room while he thought about it. Some bystander started bad-mouthing him, and I told the guy off with the line: “Fuck you. WE’RE working for Tarantino!” while glancing around to see if Tarantino was in the scene, pulling a director’s cameo.

Except in the dream I couldn’t quite remember his name, so I said Victor Tarantino.

Now considering the possibility this was a movie about a movie being directed by Quentin Tarantino’s fictional less-successful brother Victor (played by Quentin, natch).
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by John Scalzi

I think it’s important to note, when writing a series of essays about “comfort watches,” that not every movie on that list is going to be a comfortable watch. Some of them might even be hard-“R” movies with lots of violence, portraying a decaying civilization where law is rare and order is even more so, and where everyone in the movie is pretty much just hanging on by their fingernails. These movies are not nice! Nevertheless there is something relentlessly rewatchable about them, something that makes you just settle in on the couch for a couple of hours with a smile on your face, maybe because you’re sure glad you don’t live there. For me, Dredd is one of those films. The world of Mega-City One is a terrible place and I hope never to take up permanent residence, but I’m happy to visit. That is, from behind a pane of bulletproof glass.

For those of you not familiar with the 2000 AD comic feature on which the film is based (and have otherwise and correctly blocked the painfully bad 1995 Sylvester Stallone film made from the same source material from your brain): The world is fucked and irradiated and almost all of it is a wasteland, except Mega-City One, with 800 million people stretching across the Acela Corridor of the United States. Most people there live crappy lives in “megablock” apartment complexes that can house 50,000 people, and along with residents, are filled with crime and drugs. Law enforcement is sparse and in the hands of “Judges,” empowered both to stop and punish crime at the same time. Basically, life sucks, and if you do crime, you’re likely to get away with it, but when you don’t, some extremely well-armed dude is going to shoot you in the head about it. Fun!

The titular character, Dredd, is a judge, who never takes off his helmet and rarely speaks more than a sentence at a time. He’s assessing a trainee judge named Anderson, who also happens to be psychic (in the Judge Dredd mythology there is a whole thing about mutants and such, and it’s not really more than waved at here). Dredd and Anderson enter a megablock after a drug-related crime, which for various reasons annoys the local drug lord named Ma-Ma; she locks down the entire megablock and puts a hit out on the judges. From there, things get real messy, real quick.

As noted earlier, this comic book material was made into a movie before, in 1995. It just did not work, not in the least because it was far more of a Sylvester Stallone vehicle than a Judge Dredd movie — here’s Stallone galumphing around without his helmet so you can see his face, complete with overly-blue contacts, here’s Stallone tromping through a bunch of sets that look like sets, not slums, here’s Stallone bellowing Dredd’s catchphrase “IYAMDELAW” with scenery chewing abandon, and being saddled with Rob Schneider as comedy relief because it was the 90s and apparently that was just what was done back in the day. This movie was made by Hollywood Pictures, which at the time was Disney’s off-off-brand, and while the movie was rated “R,” every inch of it gave off a soft PG-13 vibe. This was a movie that yearned for its hero to be made a figurine in a McDonald’s happy meal.

Dredd, which came out in 2012… is not that. From the opening moments, Dredd makes it clear that this future, shot on location in South Africa, is literally trash; everything is run-down, nothing is new, the color scheme is graded heavily into sicky yellows and greens (except for the blood, which is super, super red). This Mega-City One doesn’t feel like a bunch of sets; it’s ugly and tired and feels all-too possible. Dredd himself, played by Karl Urban, is night and day from the Stallone iteration. When he says “I am the law,” it’s not a bellow. It’s a deeply scary intonation of facts. And he never takes off his damn helmet.

It helps that Dredd isn’t trying to do too much. The movie isn’t trying to jam in seven different storylines and five movies’ worth of worldbuilding into a single film. It keeps to a single story, a single day, and, mostly, a single location. After a brief opening voiceover, you learn about the world diagetically. For longtime fans of the Judge Dredd world, there are little easter eggs here and there but nothing that winks at the viewer. For everyone else, you learn just enough of what you need to get through the story, and everything else is atmosphere. The story is economical, partly because it had to be — the film had a budget of no more than $45 million, half of what the 90s version had to work with more than two decades earlier — but also partly because Alex Garland, who wrote the script (and who largely edited the movie after it was shot) was smart enough to realize every thing he wanted and needed to say about this world could be done with one, admittedly extreme, bad day in the life of its protagonist.

And what is there to say about Dredd himself? Largely that Urban plays him not as a star vehicle but as an archetype. Urban’s Judge Dredd could hang out with Clint Eastwood’s Man With No Name quite handily. The two of them wouldn’t say much, but they wouldn’t have to; like understands like. Dredd doesn’t explain himself, has no extended monologues that are a journey into his interior life, and there is no indication that, when he is off the clock, he does anything but stand in a room, silently, waiting for his next shift. In the movie, Dredd isn’t focused on anything other than what’s directly in front of him, and Urban isn’t focused on anything other than getting Dredd to his next scene. Now, you can argue whether Urban’s low and mostly emotionless growl in this film constitutes good acting in a general sense. I don’t think you can argue it isn’t just about perfect for what the character is supposed to be, in the context of the film.

Judge Dredd, the comic book, is known to be a satire of both US and British politics and both nations’ rather shameful but continual flirtation with fascism, but as George S. Kaufman once said, satire is what closes on Saturday night. Even when one acknowledges that satire doesn’t have to be overtly funny, and is often more effective when it is not, there is nothing about Dredd that feels particularly satirical. Garland’s version of Mega-City One doesn’t present as satire or even as a cautionary tale; it just feels like a fact. Shit went bad. This is what’s left.

There is no world in which individuals should be walking around, embodying an entire legal process whole in themselves. “I Am The Law” is the very definition of authoritarianism and in the real world should be actively and passionately fought against. In Dredd’s world, however, this battle has already been fought, and lost. You get the law you get, piecemeal and not enough of it, and if you’re not actively a criminal, you’re happy with what little you get at all.

This is not a world I ever want to live in, and I will be happy to spend the rest of my life fighting against anything like it. But as a spectator, it’s fascinating, and in Dredd, it feels close enough to real to pack a punch. Everything in Dredd is some flavor of bad; everyone in Dredd is some level of desperate. No one is happy and everyone is looking for an escape of some sort. In this context, Judge Dredd is a strange and compelling constant. He’s not happy or sad, or fearful or mad. He is, simply, the law. That’s all he is. That’s all he needs to be.

— JS

(no subject)

Dec. 5th, 2025 06:32 pm
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] maju
This evening we went to the town lighting of the Christmas tree at the town centre/center. The temperature was around -3C/26F so we all dressed very warmly. I was wearing heavy wool socks, parka, gloves, wool scarf, and warm hat, and had the hood of the parka up as well, and while most of me stayed warm enough, my toes and my nose got very cold, and my gloves weren't quite thick enough and my fingers were cold as well. We were standing around outside for about an hour listening to recorded music as well as to the local middle school brass band playing Christmas songs, and my daughter and I were just wishing they would hurry up and get to the tree lighting part because we were so cold. When they did eventually flip the switch to light the tree it was very dramatic of course. After the tree was lit one of the local fire trucks arrived fully decorated with Christmas lights and carrying Santa Claus. The girls had fun with various school friends but they were happy to come home after an hour. Now I'm at home trying to get the blood flowing to my toes again. The floor in this basement has heating but it seems to run in a fairly narrow band across the middle of the floor, so I have to sit in a particular spot so that my feet are on the warm part. It feels good but my toes are still very cold and still look blue.

Why are Japanese still using kanji?

Dec. 5th, 2025 11:08 pm
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

The Koreans and Vietnamese got rid of them within the last century, even the Chinese — for more than a century — seriously considered abolishing the sinographs, and have simplified them until they are but a pale remnant of what they used to be.  Moreover, after WWI, when — with the help of the American occupation — Japan had a real chance to switch to an alphabet, the Japanese, on the whole, still clung to the kanji.  This is not to mention that the first great novel in an East Asian language, The Tale of Genji (before 1021 AD), which has a stature in Japan similar to that= of Shakespeare in the United Kingdom (Sonja Arntzen), was written by Lady Murasaki in the phonetic hiragana syllabary (aka "women's writing").  

The fact that the Japanese still have not abandoned the archaic morphosyllabic / logographic script is a conundrum that has puzzled me since I first learned Chinese and Japanese more than half a century ago.  Such a fundamental question about the history of East Asian writing is one that could scarcely escape the attention of rishika Julesy.  Here is her video about this thorny matter, "Why Kanji Survived in Japan (But Not in Korea or Vietnam)" (22:25).  I am confident that, as always, she will have something enlightening to say about this perplexing subject.

Well, this was the longest and arguably the most challenging video for Julesy to make, but, as usual (always?), she nails it.  In the first part of her presentation, Julesy dives deep into the linguistic and practical side of the problem. In the second (relatively shorter) part of the presentation, she looks at the cultural and emotional aspects of the three countries'  (Vietnam, Korea, and Japan) attachment to sinographs.

As usual, Julesy inevitably says something near the end that I disagree with.  In this case, she faintly suggests that it might be nice if Korea and Vietnam welcomed back some of the sinographs so they could better understand the background of many common words in their languages.  I don't think there's a snowball's chance in hell that will happen — unless China resubjugates Vietnam and Korea.  In the current global order and economy, that doesn't seem very likely either.

One biggie that Julesy has yet to tackle, but is related to several of her previous investigations, including this one, is how English has factored in East Asian language development during the past century and more.  Knowing Julesy's scientific bent well enough not to expect her to predict the future, I'd be happy enough just to hear her analysis of what has already happened with English in East Asia during the last century and more.

 

Selected readings

(no subject)

Dec. 5th, 2025 05:31 pm
watersword: A empty box with the words "but I, alas, do not know how to see sheep through the walls of boxes" from Le petit prince (Writing: sheep through the walls of boxe)
[personal profile] watersword

On this Bandcamp Friday, I have purchased the entirety of Dessa's discography; made a loaf of bread for potluck Shabbat services tonight; gone to the makerspace to continue sanding the drawer divider pieces I made with the laser cutter earlier this week; picked up my CSA box; nearly froze to death waiting for the bus home.

Mar-i-a The-re-sia, M.T.

Dec. 5th, 2025 11:15 pm
schneefink: Ambassador Yan staring out at enemy country (NiF ambassador Yan)
[personal profile] schneefink
I'm feeling better, but I went to the doctor's office and to the pharmacy and to the store this morning and afterwards I was absolutely wiped.

Too tired to catch up on chores just yet, but I can start catching up on reviews, at least.

Three weeks ago, friends and I went to see Maria Theresia the musical at Ronacher. I rarely go see musicals in Vienna; the last one was the Falco musical in the same place around 1-2 years ago, both of them premiered there. I enjoyed "Rock Me Amadeus" more than expected, so I was very curious about a new one about empress Maria Theresia. A key figure of Austrian history; I only remembered bits and pieces of what I learned about her at school and during museum visits etc, but I briefly looked at her Wikipedia page beforehand just in case.

I had a good time! The beginning was the weakest part imo, but then it picked up the pace and focus. Of course they took plenty of liberties with historical facts but that was inevitable. I liked the music (not especially memorable but I am also not great at remembering music in general tbf) and staging, and especially some of the things they did with the lights. I found Falco too loud in places, but not this one, possibly because we sat further back.

Spoilers )


Afterwards I was in the mood to read a book about the Habsburgs, and the only one currently available as an ebook from the library was one about "scandalous love affairs of the Habsburgs," by Hanne Egghardt. Fortunately a quick stop to any romanticizing of the Habsburgs through sheer, hm, mundanity. It features several scandalous affairs throughout the centuries, from the wife of the emperor falling in love with and almost certainly having an affair with her sister-in-law, to Napoleon's widow having kids with a general sent to look after her, to several archdukes falling in love with "commoners" - with varying degrees of happy endings that all showcase why such relationships were viewed with much skepticism.
It was often mentioned that these nobles had allowances of specific sums of money that all sounded like a lot, but I have no context how much so-and-so thousand guilders were worth back then so I couldn't say whether they were extremely rich or just moderately wealthy for their station.

10 things about the gay hockey show

Dec. 5th, 2025 09:37 pm
marina: (pretty boys)
[personal profile] marina
So, I've been stuck at home for 3 weeks now with a broken ankle. I've watched so much TV. SO. MUCH. TV. Some of it utterly delightful ("The Summer I Turned Pretty", "Queen of the South"), some of it utterly forgettable. Then "Heated Rivalry" came out, and due to the tragic circumstances of being stuck at home, I've watched the first 2 episodes. Let us acknowledge this up front: I should have only watched this show after it finished airing. Like, week-to-week is a very bad format for me with this show.

However, episodes have been consumed, this show is already doing numbers in fannish circles for obvious reasons, my guess is that that trend will continue, and so I need to get stuff off my chest I guess. Think of this not as a public statement but more as a private space where I process stuff, just for the sake of framing the below.

thoughts in no particular order )

Bill Bored – DORK TOWER 05.12.25

Dec. 5th, 2025 09:10 pm
[syndicated profile] dorktower_feed

Posted by John Kovalic

Most DORK TOWER strips are now available as signed, high-quality prints, from just $25!  CLICK HERE to find out more!

HEY! Want to help keep DORK TOWER going? Then consider joining the DORK TOWER Patreon and ENLIST IN THE ARMY OF DORKNESS TODAY! (We have COOKIES!) (And SWAG!) (And GRATITUDE!)