nineveh_uk: Illustration that looks like Harriet Vane (Default)
[personal profile] nineveh_uk
Beige is a practical summer work cardi colour. It doesn't suit you and you never wear it.

These trousers are lovely. Their shape is perfect for you and suits you really well, the wool fabric is in perfect condition. But you got them 18 years ago, they were a Hobbs sample in a smaller size, and it is hardly surprising they are too small. They should go. But you need to mend the lining first. Or cut it out? Because you will never have time to mend it.

These trousers are likewise a great style and shape for you. But you bought them on Ebay knowing they were a size too large and planning to take them in. You could send them back. But you won't.

You made this great vintage style dress. It was snug then, when you had just had norovirus, because fitting it was a nightmare. Also, you can't sing in choirs at the moment anyway. You can let it serve someone else in winter party and concert season. Please. You can.

Why on earth did you buy all three volumes of Captive Prince on fandom osmosis before reading the first and discovering that fandom osmosis lied to you and these are not books of Nirvana in Fire court scheming? You do not have to read the second and third, you will not learn valuable things about writing from them. You also can drop them somewhere you don't do Gift Aid so you don't have to be embarrassed by the pro published slavefic.

You've never liked this blouse, much as you want to. It needs ironing. Do that!

Thank goodness, this jumper has no complicated feelings attached.

(no subject)

Dec. 4th, 2025 09:45 am
oursin: hedgehog in santa hat saying bah humbug (Default)
[personal profile] oursin
Happy birthday, [personal profile] gchick!
beanside: (Default)
[personal profile] beanside
It's Thursday, and it's going to be a busy day! I'm up at 4am so that I can take Jess to Sibley for their 3(ish) month post op. It's really just a formality, since they're doing great. The scars look good, and they're pretty happy with the results. Weirdly, the spots where the drains were are bigger and more prominent. But they were in for 3 weeks, so not horribly shocking.

Then, it's home from DC, and off to work for four hours. Then, I shall go forth and get my leg tattooed.

I'm nervous about the tattoo, since it's been years since I had work done, and it was all black. This'll be my first tattoo with color, especially white, which is notoriously painful. It's going on my calf, so it's not a horribly sensitive area, but still. Jess is such a rock for their sittings that I'm afraid I'll ruin their reputation. "Sure, Jess is great, but have you met their spouse?"

Tomorrow, I will go to work half a day, then we're off to the wilds of Monroeville, PA for Steel City Comic Con. I'm anxious about that, too. I've never done a con like this, so I really don't know what to expect. We'll see!

My countdown app is at some interesting numbers. 1 day to Comic Con, 29 days til we go to Philly for a weekend. Then a bit of a long stretch and 145 days to going to see the Lost Boys Musical in NYC, and then 154 days til Alaska.

Jess and I were discussing the fun of the five hour flight. It's gonna suck, even if it's non-stop. I'm not a fan of flying, but sometimes, it's the best way to get places. I've decided that I'll have my anti anxiety med, and I'll just take that and hope to nap. Fuck knows, we have to get up at ass o'clock to be there 2 hours early. Our flight leaves at 7am, so we're leaving our house at 4:30am. Which means that I'm getting up at 3am. So I should be tired, right?

And now, I shall go forth and put pants on. Everyone have an outstanding Thursday!

The last full moon of 2025

Dec. 4th, 2025 08:13 am
smokingboot: (Default)
[personal profile] smokingboot
I went to a meeting of the charity with the local museum regarding a potential exhibition. The chap with there were difficulties over the Local Place Plan is, I think, the chairman or something, and I hoped he had forgotten. Kudos to him, apart from an involuntary spasm of 'Huh!' when writing was mentioned, he was positive and affable. We shall see how this develops. All went well, though my wobbles still aren't done. I hadn't eaten breakfast or lunch, so grabbed a steak slice from the local Greggs as I ran to the meeting but it can't have been enough, cos the room was whirling around me as everyone talked. Managed not to embarrass myself but was very grateful for a lift home. Low blood sugar I think.

We are painting our bedroom. R fancies gold, though I have my doubts, cos I've had mustard coloured walls and they really don't work for me. Still, we can always repaint if necessary. I will try to get the second coat done today.

Yesterday was clear enough to see the moon all day and then by evening it sat in the trees as we lit them up for the season. Later to the south west, the clouds rose and I saw a point of light, Saturn I think, shining through the dismal. In astrology Saturn gets a raw deal which is weird because it's beautiful. Tonight will be the last full moon of 2025, and soon the longest night will be with us. At the risk of sounding like I'm 104, everything is moving so fast!

Just One Thing (04 December 2025)

Dec. 4th, 2025 08:35 am
nanila: me (Default)
[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!

Poor walruses

Dec. 4th, 2025 05:47 am
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

From Mark Swofford:

Here's a lighthearted Google Translate oddity from a newspaper article on the opening of ferry service between Taiwan and Ishigaki, Japan. 

The relevant bit:

選在冬季開航,海象較差船舶易晃,影響旅客搭乘意願。洪郁航表示,首航至明年2月底將採試營運優惠價,最低優惠至2000元,而最大優惠價差高達2000元,提高民眾嘗試及體驗意願。

Google Translate renders the main part of that as: 

"Choosing to sail in winter, ships with poor walruses are prone to shaking, which affects passengers' willingness to board."

But if one adds a comma, Google Translate does fine: 

選在冬季開航,海象較差船舶易晃,影響旅客搭乘意願。洪郁航表示,首航至明年2月底將採試營運優惠價,最低優惠至2000元,而最大優惠價差高達2000元,提高民眾嘗試及體驗意願。

"Launching the service during winter is problematic due to rough seas and potential ship swaying, which could discourage passengers from taking the trip."

Screenshot:

This fits right in with my recent post about the importance of the space in the tattooed declaration of the left flank of the French rugby player:  "Parsing of a fated kin tattoo" (11/29/25).

Punctuation matters.

 

Selected readings

Human Washing Machine

Dec. 4th, 2025 05:44 am
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

Headline on NDTV, Nov. 29, 2025: "Japan Unveils Human Washing Machine, Now You Can Get Washed Like Laundry."


From François Lang, who sent this item to me:

I initially parsed this headline as a human [washing machine]; only after looking at the photo did I realize it was a [human washing] machine. Another headline that would have been made a lot clearer via simple hyphen!

 

Selected readings

"Quadrilingual Washlet Instructions" (8/22/08)

"Japanese hi-tech toilet instructions" (1/19/17)

"Advanced mission" (6/19/21)

 …and there are many other entertaining appliances for the bathroom.

"Are you OK?" (11/2/25)

What even is sleep?

Dec. 3rd, 2025 11:06 pm
cornerofmadness: a scarred young man wearing a santa hat (Default)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness
Last night I was not tired. 3 AM I'm still wide awake. Finally drift off, wake at 630. I mean 3 hours is enough, right? Fell asleep grading tonight, big red line straight down someone's test.

My stomach is higher acid now than it has been and I have more sore in my mouth. sigh.

Left here with a weird call from my dentist. We had to bill something for the comprehensive exam (which my insurance doesn't allow more than 2) What comprehensive? You didn't even take X-rays and Aspen only did a follow up. I'll need to call my insurance. Came home to an even weirder call on the messages, something about medical mutual making a referal to Anthem Blue Cross...um WHAT? Insurances don't refer to each other. I have no idea.

I had to do a make up lab in the middle of the faculty meeting about all the forced Republican laws we now have to follow in OH (where in universities must bow to Republican rule or be closed more or less, fun fascist times)

What I Just Finished Reading:

Haunted Cemeteries of Ohio

A Twist of Murder - Charles Dickens is the detective, yes another real person fanfic mystery. So far I am unimpressed.


Spellbound: A Graphic Memoir by Bishakh Kumar Som - boring AF memoir theoretically about a trans journey, mostly about watching her building alcoholism and whining about how hard it is to make a living as a graphic novel artist

What I am Currently Reading:


Death at the Door - a meh paranormal mystery


Wyches - a graphic novel horror I got from the library

Ripped Tide - short mystery I got at the WV book festival. It is...bad.


What I Plan to Read Next: To die Once, Poorly Made and Other Things


November's readings. You know how I like to talk books so if you see something interesting.


Blade Girl 1 manga, contemporary

Anne of Green Gables classics

Revenge, Served Royal historical mystery

The Tea Dragon Society fantasy middle grade graphic novel

Lackadaisy: Volume #2 historical fantasy graphic novel

ElfQuest, Volume One fantasy graphic novel

Spell-Bound rural fantasy, Appalachian gothic

Spellbound: A Graphic Memoir memoir graphic novel

A Twist of Murder historical mystery

Disadvent the Third

Dec. 4th, 2025 12:10 am
psocoptera: ink drawing of celtic knot (Default)
[personal profile] psocoptera
Travel-sized bottles with just a tiny bit of dried-up lotion or hand sanitizer. The lip balm I like but which always goes off too soon if left in a purse or near a radiator. The vanilla chai toothpaste I bought to see whether a non-mint toothpaste would help my heartburn any. (No, and it was gross, and this was years ago, and I take a PPI now.) The bag of some weird brand of more-organic pads that I hated that's been falling on my head every time I have to get something off of the top shelf of the hall cupboard for the past, like, ten years - but what if I threw them out and there was some kind of supply chain failure, wouldn't it be better to have them in an emergency? (No.)

Aurendor D&D: Summary for 12/3 Game

Dec. 4th, 2025 12:20 am
settiai: (Siân -- settiai)
[personal profile] settiai
In tonight's game, the rest under a cut for those who don't care. )

And that's where we left off.

XScreenSaver and PAM

Dec. 4th, 2025 04:14 am
[syndicated profile] jwz_blog_feed

Posted by jwz

Lazyweb, I have PAM questions.

I added support for PAM to XScreenSaver in 1998, when PAM itself was a little two-year-old baby. Your keyboard was still PS2 and HDMI hadn't been invented yet. For lo these many decades, nobody could agree on what went in /etc/pam.conf or /etc/pam.d/login and it was all a giant mess.

Things that used to sometimes be true:

  • If /etc/pam.d/xscreensaver didn't exist you couldn't unlock the screen at all.
  • "cp /etc/pam.d/login /etc/pam.d/xscreensaver" was insufficient, some lines had to be omitted.
  • You have to call pam_chauthtok() or an unauthorized user might be able to unlock.
  • No, if you call pam_chauthtok() it will always fail so don't do that.
  • No wait, actually you have to call pam_chauthtok() because it has side effects but you have to ignore its failure.
  • You have to PAM_REFRESH_CRED every time.
  • No wait, that doesn't work, you have to PAM_REINITIALIZE_CRED every time instead. But not on Solaris.

I could not even hazard a guess as to which of these things are still true, or how many decades ago they stopped being true, or which of them are influenced by Linux versus BSD versus Solaris versus HPUX versus AIX versus Kerberos or other things that nobody cares about any more.

So I am considering making the following changes:

  • Always call pam_chauthtok() and respect its result status. I think sshd does this.
  • Remove the configure option --enable-pam-check-account-type (which probably should always have been a runtime option, not a compile-time option, but here we are).
  • At installation time, create /etc/pam.d/xscreensaver as a file containing the single line "@include login"

What I would like to know is: will this break things on your system? Particular emphasis for this question on people running weird-assed obscure systems.

Mysteriously, but seriously.

Dec. 3rd, 2025 10:42 pm
hannah: (Martini - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
It wasn't exactly a bar crawl or a pub crawl since one was very much a pub and the other was very much a bar, and it was still one of each of those, starting at the pub and ending at the bar. Two drinks in two locations full of the sound of human voices. It counts as a crawl. I've done art crawls before, and this was my first crawl of this type, however you want to describe it, whatever the specific and precise nomenclature. I've never done one before and it'll be a while before I have another one like this again, in large part because there's no chance to repeat it. Because the pub's closing tonight.

I'd read about it closing a few days ago, and went there last night to check it out, indulge in fish and chips, have a cider that tasted like college and a margarita that meant business - and the cider really did taste like the ciders I had in college, sweet and soft, the bottle the same shape on my lips. It brought back a host of good memories of being afraid of new things and doing them anyway, the thrill of being someplace very grown-up and learning how to handle myself in that kind of world. It didn't quite have the smell of some of those places, but this pub was only in its present location about twelve years, and you need at least fifteen to build up that kind of aroma. If there was a scented candle of such an aroma, I'd seriously consider buying one, and while the smell wasn't there last night, the feeling was. My younger brother was on the fence about going last night, but was up for it tonight if it'd still be open. Tonight was its last night, so I called him up and off we went.

We stopped for hot dogs first. I got to the pub and saw that they were going a step beyond having the last night in that they were actively dismantling the jukebox - the jukebox that the night before had played the Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, Kansas, those kinds of bands - and figured that if they were taking that apart, there probably wasn't a kitchen anymore. Myself, I'd decided that I could do pub drinks two nights in a row but not pub foods, so I'd eaten before I left. But he was still waiting on dinner. So we went to a corner hot dog place a block away and he got one with onions and mustard, and another with ketchup, sauerkraut, and relish, plus a papaya drink. That's seriously what it was. Not papaya juice. The menu said "papaya drink." It tasted more like the melon the fruit is than the fruit itself usually does. We hung around as he ate, marveling in the old school accents that wandered through and ordered hot dogs well-done. Armed and ready, we made our way down the block, and down three steps, and into a place full of the human voice. The music was almost gone - sometime during our stay there, someone played "Piano Man", and if that's the last song in a place open until two AM with smokers hanging around outside, it's a suitable one. I had a cider and he had a beer, and we both did a shot of Jameson's straight up. Earlier that night, I saw a guy come in on roller blades, wearing hockey gear and bearing a stick, and during our hour and a half there, we saw people pass on well-wishes and old stories to the bartenders, thanking them for so many years and all the memories they'd helped make.

The only music that played was one song. Nothing else. Everything that I heard was the sound of the bar itself, and the sound of the human voice. Up and down the bar, in front and behind, throughout the guts of the place as the kitchen got cleaned out and the empty bottles taken away. It was a fantastic sound, with nothing getting in its way, and the rarity of it was both that there was nothing in its way and that it was overall quite happy. A place for people to meet and greet and take some of the world away for a while can have alcohol, it can have food, it can be indoors or outdoors, there's a lot of variance and possibilities, and for a moment, while I had it indoors, nothing got in its way. Just this beautiful sound that I could usually only catch a few syllables of at a time. Next to me was my brother, who spoke about his in-laws. Next to me was someone asking for a drink, or someone catching up with a friend and telling him to meet another friend who'd know who sent him, or trying to move through a narrow space to get to the bathroom without making anyone spill.

We had our drinks, and we walked out. It was a few degrees above freezing with an almost full moon high above and we were bolstered to walk seven blocks from a pub in its last hours to a bar comfortably set for the foreseeable future. Even less space, even less overhead, three steps up instead of three steps down. More music, though. A range from the same kind of music as the night before - Creedence Clearwater Revival, Cream - to songs that came out earlier this calendar year. Another beer for him, an Irish coffee for me because I'd wanted one for a while and the first place wasn't equipped to make coffee anymore. Not as many people around, but still close enough to the first place in that it wasn't too loud we couldn't hear the presence of the people around us. It wasn't an overwhelming amount of sound to hide the fact that the place wasn't very good or a lot of screens as a way to keep you from realizing you aren't having a good time. There were screens, but no sound, and none in the back. There was music, but not so loud it cut through the conversations. It was remarkably well-balanced and arranged, and we talked about travel and friends and real estate and made each other laugh until it was time for us to head on out. I might live on the same island, but he had an hour's travel at the very least, and wanted to get back home before tomorrow.

We started at one spot and ended at another. Drinks and talk at both. Two links still make up a crawl. There's other places in both our neighborhoods for us to do it again, and it'll never be quite the same. And I'm good with it having been this way once, because it was the kind of thing that even if both were staying around, wouldn't feel the same for it being something so new. It wasn't college in the bottle of cider so much as it was the memory of how it felt, and now I've made a new set of memories.
landofnowhere: (Default)
[personal profile] landofnowhere
Testimony of Mute Things, Lois McMaster Bujold. Another Penric! This should have gone in last week's book post, but I forgot, which says something about how much of an impression it made on me. I was looking forward to "Penric and Des solve a murder", but wasn't as excited by the book as I'd hoped. On the plus side, we got more princess-archdivine, who is the best archdivine, and not just because I like saying "princess-archdivine".

Much Ado About Numbers, Rob Eastaway. A book about the ways math is used in Shakespeare that provides relevant historical context, this lands smack in the intersection of my special interests Venn diagram. I thought it might be gimmicky, and it does have some trivia, but I really liked it, and it has helpful tables of things like units of measurement used in Shakespeare and how they compare. Unfortunately I only got about 70 pages into it because it was an overdue book that my mom needed to return to the library. Will be picking up for the rest, though.

Unabridged, Stefan Fatsis. A book about dictionaries, past, present, and future, seen from the perspective of Merriam-Webster, where Fatsis worked part-time proposing new words and definitions while researching that book. Very readable, I learned some things and enjoyed the inside peek at Merriam-Webster (which reminded me in some ways of my own workplace). However I found Fatsis's "I'm a sports bro, not one of these nerds" narrative posture a bit distracting (I think I felt the same way about his book Word Freak on tournament Scrabble when I read it over 20 years ago).

Lucky Few, Kathryn Ormsbee. [personal profile] lannamichaels reviewed this author's autobiographical-ish middle grade graphic novel Turning Twelve, and since I've been whining for decades now about the lack of books about homeschoolers that have plots other than "homeschooler goes to school for the first time", I was intrigued. (I'm pretty sure there are now a lot of millenial writer homeschool alumni who would happily write what they know, and the challenge is figuring out how to sell it; Kristyn Miller's Given Our History did it by having the homeschool bits be flashbacks in a second-chance romance, and I enjoyed the flashbacks but felt that the present-day romance suffered from being less grounded in reality.)

I picked this up because I was more interested in reading a YA book than a middle grade graphic novel, and I needed an airplane book; however I suspect that Turning Twelve is a much better book. Lucky Few did do its job of entertaining me during an extended travel delay, it had some good banter and I liked the protagonist's super nerdy BFF. I'm not going to get into a detailed critique of the book (though I could, and if you set me off in the comemnts I might), but this managed to make homeschooling come across as entirely unappealing. Now, not every book can be Libby on Wednesday with the awesome house and extended family. But the homeschooling here was pretty heavily on the school-at-home end of things, and had pretty much all the same drawbacks as school in terms of social life, as well as background toxic homeschool group parent dynamics, while not seeming to come with any real advantages.

A pair of word puzzle games

Dec. 3rd, 2025 08:37 pm
thewayne: (Default)
[personal profile] thewayne
Called Pairdown, located at https://pairdown.com/

In the initial level, you click on a letter to remove it, forming a new word. Then the letters that you remove form a word! The second level, you remove two letters of different color, and the first color forms one word, the second another.

Then the harder difficulty blurs a letter in the word!


Another game on the web site is I'm Squeezy at https://imsqueezy.com/. You click on a letter in the column on the left to insert it into the spaces between letters in the words on the right.

Daily Happiness

Dec. 3rd, 2025 07:27 pm
torachan: charlotte from bad machinery saying "oh the mysteries of the moth farm" (oh the mysteries of the moth farm)
[personal profile] torachan
1. I stopped in the bagel shop on my walk this morning because I saw through the door that they have a new white chocolate peppermint latte and that was irresistible! I also got a pumpkin sandwich cookie (cream cheese frosting inside) and that was also very tasty. And on the menu they have a Thanksgiving sandwich, so I asked the guy at the counter how long they would have it for and he said this week and maybe next week, so since Carla will be home tomorrow (picking her up at the airport later tonight), I'm going to get us that for breakfast.

2. I got an email today from the library saying they will be closed for the weeks of Christmas and New Year, so I went and put a bunch of books on hold so I can have plenty of books to tide me through. Not that I don't have a bunch of books at home or ebooks and such, but I always like to have a physical library book going as well.

3. When I got home from my walk this morning there was a strong cat pee smell in the living room, which is a bad sign since there are no litterboxes in that room. I managed to pin it down to the warming bed by the front window. Nothing was wet or even damp, but it definitely smelled like pee. I think someone sat on it with a damp butt and the warming function enhanced the smell. D: But using enzyme spray and running it through the wash seems to have gotten the smell out, except for the foam siding, which can't be washed and had to be thrown away. So now it is a warming cushion instead. After I did that wash, I noticed the smell seemed to have also seeped into the drapes that hang right next to it, so I had to wash those, too, and ended up just working from home today because of too much laundry lol. Thankfully I did not have anything pressing that required going into the office.

4. Look at this guy!

Wednesday reading

Dec. 3rd, 2025 09:52 pm
redbird: full bookshelves and table in a library (books)
[personal profile] redbird
Books read in the last couple of months:

Sofia Samatar, The Winged Histories:. This is odd and somewhat disjointed, set in the same secondary world as A Stranger in Olondria (which I read ages ago and remember very little about). The threads all come together at the end. I’d been displeased earlier because I thought we’d lost both the first narrative voice, which I liked, and the continuity of the narrator's story. The book does get back to her story, or at least her sister and cousin’s stories.

James Thurber, The Thirteen Clocks: read aloud, because Adrian had never read it. Still delightful, a fairy tale set in a world where people have at least heard of fairy tales.

Lorraine Baston, Rules: A Short History of What We Live By. Baston talks about rules as measuring devices, as sets of instructions, and as models, and various shifts in meaning over time. She talks about thick and thin rules, thick rules being ones with (more) examples and details, and which anticipate more exceptions. A about the change in how people learn/are taught all sorts of things, including math. I enjoyed this, and if that description sounds interesting you probably will too.

Edward Eager, The Time Garden: Children's magical adventures while spending the summer with a relative because their parents are in London, working on the premiere of a play. Another read-aloud, this one was new to me, and fun.

Helen Scales, What the Wild Sea Can Be: The state, as of 2023, and possible futures of the ocean and ocean life in the Anthropocene, according to an oceanographer. I asked the library for this because I liked the author's book about mollusks.

Wonderful book: Kitchens of Hope

Dec. 3rd, 2025 06:12 pm
sonia: Quilted wall-hanging (Default)
[personal profile] sonia
[personal profile] runpunkrun asked if I've read any good books lately, and I've been lucky enough to find several. Ongoing booklog at Curious, Healing.

The one I want to highlight today is Kitchens of Hope by by Linda S. Svitak and Christin Jaye Eaton with Lee Svitak Dean
Subtitle: How transforming ourselves can change the world

This book out of Minnesota is a celebration of immigrant success stories and food from around the world. I haven’t tried any of the recipes yet, but I loved the photos and stories of how people connected with each other and found new places to thrive.

Highly recommended – I’m giving copies for the holidays this year.

Photography of the cooks and their dishes by Tom Wallace
shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
Contemplating taking up chair yoga at home. All I need is my chair which I bought for the peddler that I got rid of. I don't know what it is about December and the Christmas season that seems to instill me with anxiety and depression - often at the same time. I'm fighting both at the moment.

Called the optometrist to find out what the status was on my contacts, which I'd ordered way back on November 8. I left two messages.

Optometrist: We didn't order any contacts for you.
Me: Yes, you did. Either that or it was an incredibly expensive exam.
Optometrist: Let me check - oh, wait, yes, we did. (flustered). My mistake. Sorry about that. I'll look into it and get back to you.
ME: Whew. You had me worried. Considering I ordered them way back on November 8 - they should be ready by now, that was over a month ago.
Optometrist: Yes, yes, we're so sorry. We'll get back to you.

How much you want to bet that that order hadn't gone through in November or they stupidly gave it to someone else and now have to order them again? Thank god, I have enough for another two-three months.

People are stressing me out. Work is always stressful at this time of year - our fiscal year ends in December, so there's this mad rush by all the idiotic procrastinators to send work my way. (I don't procrastinate at work, elsewhere yes, but not at work.) Honestly, sometimes I wish I could take off sometime around November to some exotic island somewhere, and not return until March 30. Solves the seasonal depression issue, and the anxiety issue. I am prone to seasonal depression because I need sunlight and blue skies. Drab, gray, rainy skies make me hurt and depress me. Hence the reason I don't live further north than NYC, nor in the Pacific Northwest, the Midwest, or Canada. I don't mind darkness at night? But I need sunshine.

**

Buffy S5 Rewatch ( Buffy is my mental health/comfort series, particularly the later seasons. I don't know why exactly? But something about it comforts me when I get stressed, frustrated or depressed. More than anything else. It's one of those things that you either get or you don't?)

The Replacement - Season 5, Episode 3. The first three episodes spend a lot of time setting the stage for what is coming, and setting up the characters, also depending on the previous year - placing the characters in either a good spot or a bad one. You can always tell how the season will end, based on where everyone is in the beginning of the season. If a character is isolated from everyone in the beginning of the season - they won't be at the end for example? Or if a character is happy, and in a relationship, and seemingly doing great - they won't be at the end. They also set the tone and the theme. It's pretty clear by the time we get to this episode that this season is about duality.
Read more... )


Book Meme

1. Still reading "The Lady's Guide to Mischief and Mayhem" - which is spending way too much time developing a romance between a newspaper owner and a police inspector, and not enough time on the friendship between two female journalists, investigating the murder, and well the promised mischief and mayhem. I may jump over to the Ill-Manner Ladies Guide to Utter Ruin Book 2 instead. Or Gideon The Ninth.

2. Am making more headway listening to the Paul Newman memoir - which is all the transcripts of all the audio recordings. (Newman burned the audio recordings in a fit of self-revulsion and embarrassment (he was a private man, and not comfortable talking about himself), but, alas they were all transcribed by his best friend a year or so prior to the burning and his kids found them a few years after both he and his friend died, and after much hemming and hawing, decided to publish them in a book - they also gave them to the actor and director Ethan Hawk (for reasons that I fail to completely understand) to make a documentary. This by the way proves that I'm wrong about why Hawk didn't delve into Paul's relationships with his family and siblings and the Sporting Goods Store. It wasn't because he didn't have access or was necessarily forbidden? I think it was because it was already in the memoir and already out there and didn't interest Hawk, the actor and director, all that much? Actors and Directors tend to be somewhat introspective and self-involved? And like to well talk about their own field more than dysfunctional families and Sporting Goods Stores? Hawk focused on what interested Hawk and ignored everything else.)

I started this after I finished re-listening to Graphic Audio's dramatization of the entire Kate Daniels Magic Series - which is excellent by the way. It has a full cast. Like a movie in your mind.
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