One Piece season 2

Mar. 13th, 2026 09:52 pm
sholio: (Egypt-Yellow Submarine)
[personal profile] sholio
I watched it this week and enjoyed it as much as the first season if not more, since I remembered fewer of the plot specifics, and this season introduces some more of the characters I really like. It's still absolutely bonkers. If you've seen season one, you know what to expect.

Spoilers, occasional anima/manga comparisons, vague references to future events )

Philosophical Questions: Pictures

Mar. 14th, 2026 12:16 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
People have expressed interest in deep topics, so this list focuses on philosophical questions.

What will be/are some of the by-products to society of everyone having the ability to take pictures or a video at any time?

Read more... )

a guide

Mar. 13th, 2026 09:58 pm
calimac: (Default)
[personal profile] calimac
I wrote to Pat Murphy. I said we all liked her book, there was just one small error. She asked for more information. I sent her an explanation. Rather than being put off by this core dump, she thanked me for it and asked if she could copy my e-mail to another author who was interested. I said don't bother, I've put the whole thing online. Pass it along to anyone who's interested.

So here it is, "A Guide to Terms of Address for British Nobility." Let me know if there's anything wrong, or anything left out you think is necessary.

(no subject)

Mar. 14th, 2026 04:43 am
[syndicated profile] apod_feed

In this composited night skyscape, stacked exposures trace graceful In this composited night skyscape, stacked exposures trace graceful


Communities

Mar. 13th, 2026 11:04 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Separation of Church and Parking Lot

How can we repurpose church parking lots for the better?

But unlike the bank in the bottom left of the first map, whose lot is never full—even predictably so—and where one might justify changing the parking requirements to accommodate this phenomenon, churches are assembly halls. Once or twice a week, they do fill up.

And unlike the banks, churches, mosques, temples, and other houses of worship are civic spaces. These spaces are where neighbors come together to share meals and company, or where folks from dispersed corners of a city unite under a common purpose. If a city lacks the density to begin with, and driving to church is the obvious option, there is no good argument for denying a church its parking—they use it!

But a dilemma lies in the five or six days of the week in which these lots sit empty. Churches and other houses of worship are amenities within neighborhoods, but blocks of street-facing parking lots are the opposite. They sit unused for about 250 to 300 days of the year.


Read more... )

Safety

Mar. 13th, 2026 10:42 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Scientists warn that a certain type of earthquake is much more destructive and being overlooked

In a typical quake, a rupture spreads along a fault at a speed slower than shear waves, seismic waves that shake the ground sideways. A supershear rupture outruns those waves, so energy piles up at the rupture tip and forms a sharp shock front.

That shock front is why these quakes can be so damaging. A nearby town can get hammered first by the high speed rupture front, then by the trailing waves in what Elbanna describes as a “double strike”.

Wind can be Dangerous

Mar. 13th, 2026 10:05 pm
cornerofmadness: (Do not want)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness
So the winds are over 60 mph and my parents' shingles are in the yard. Needless to say Dad is pissed. This is a 50 year roof (about 20 years in) but the tar proved to be dried out and this wind took the whole of the roof from what we can tell.

Naturally my 83 y.o. father decides he must go on the roof to try to stop this. He doesn't want help. I'm like fine. And when you blow off....

He didn't. Blow off the roof nor stop the zipper effect. You can still hear the nails pulling free even after 5 hours every time the wind picks back up. At first it was just 5 shingles. By dark it was 3 dozen. Better hope it doesn't begin to rain before an insurance adjuster gets out here. Two hours on hold with the insurance company waiting for someone pick up ended with the call disconnecting at their end.


Before that we had spent the afternoon with my favorite cousin my dad's age in her senior living center. That was very nice. We barely made it home before the wind.

I tried to figure out if my insurance pays for jardiance and dexcom but now it's decided my password isn't my password and any attempt to get it to email me a password reset has failed.

And I called my endocrinologist this morning to see if I could come 30 minutes late (because she's always an h our late anyhow) they were going to call me back. Never did. the problem? They put the appoint on the only day I can't be there without canceling work. And I could have sworn it was monday. It was SUPPOSED to be monday.


I was researching something for a Hazbin Hotel story (not the one below) and I needed to see who was the first woman newscaster in America. The answer was Dorothy Fuldheim in 1947 which is way before I imagined. (Mostly I was double checking to see if Vox could have had a female co anchor in the time period S2 depicted)

I thought she was interesting so have DOrothy's history for Women's History month. You can read about her
here.


So for the fannish 50 part of this, here's my story and my recs

Title: Not Licensed For This


Summary: Angel finds himself caught between a feuding Vox and Val and tries to help them be better partners. What else could he do? An annoyed Val was a dangerous Val and Angel wasn’t putting up with it today.

Rating: teen

Notes:Written for Sarajaye in the three sentence ficathon for the prompt Hazbin Hotel, Angel+Vox/Valentino, he unwittingly ends up playing couples therapist for them.

This was also written for the [community profile] allbingo prompt of tension and for [personal profile] spikesgirl58’s 6 word prompt challenge. The six words were Spirit, Jump, Bracket, Detector, Baby, & Pudding

For some reason I set this pre-season. Just seemed like an interesting time to explore a little.

Story at the above link or under here )


Box Of Treasures Torchwood

Into The Light Stargate SG-1

House Call Teen Wolf

for tradition, of course 陈情令 | The Untamed (TV)魔道祖师 - 墨香铜臭 | Módào Zǔshī - Mòxiāng Tóngxiù

While He Sleeps Torchwood

dust cleared (on a hell changed forever) Hazbin Hotel

Carving Out Space The Owl House

but turn it does The Murderbot Diaries

Sexy Sunday The Professionals

flowers and gems Star Trek: Voyager/Star Trek: Prodigy

Sharing Secrets Stargate SG-1

Sterling Fire Emblem: Fuukasetsugetsu | Fire Emblem: Three Houses

resting my eyes Star Trek: Voyager

gifts and greetings 陈情令 | The Untamed (TV)魔道祖师 - 墨香铜臭 | Módào Zǔshī

Conspiracy Lasagna Hazbin Hotel

Finding Happiness Torchwood/Doctor Who

Dead Girl Walking The Sentinel

Tumbleweed Oz - L. Frank Baum

take me home, it's getting hard to breathe out there Hoppers (Pixar Movie 2026)

ladies in pastels and black 陈情令 | The Untamed (TV)魔道祖师 - 墨香铜臭 | Módào Zǔshī - Mòxiāng Tóngxiù

Controlled by the Darach Teen Wolf

ladies, you know what i mean, and you know what you need, and so does he Hazbin Hotel

Today's Adventures

Mar. 13th, 2026 08:05 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today we went to the Home and Garden Expo at the Otto Center. The parking lot was so full, we had to go all the way in the back to find a space -- there's a whole extra lot back there that we'd never even seen before.

Read more... )

Wardrobe.

Mar. 13th, 2026 10:10 pm
hannah: (Laundry jam - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
The other day, I ripped a hole in the armpit of a Threadless t-shirt. This is only notable because I checked and I'd gotten that shirt almost 16 years ago. It's gotten some wear and tear over the years, especially in the seams for the sleeves, and I don't know if this specific rip is repairable or not. I don't want to throw it out - it's still a good "lounging around the apartment" shirt - but what I'm tempted to do is to buy a new one as close as I can get, and see how the materials are different. Aside from the nearly 16 years of wear and wash, that is.

They're having a sale, too. Inflation means it won't come out close to the same price, even taking that into account, but it'd make for a decent excuse. I've collected enough t-shirts since college that I can go at least two months without repeating one, easily. Three, if I decide to wear the ones I got as podcast promotions as part of the regular rotation instead of being "travel" shirts. It's not something where I've sat down and counted, or even sorted through. I've just collected and worn them. And, frankly, I don't see much reason to stop. As has been said, at least it beats heroin.

Gardening

Mar. 13th, 2026 07:55 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] gardening
Seed Library Network
This website has extensive resources on seed libraries and seed swaps.

Seed the Map
Is your seed library open? Take 5 minutes to get on the Global Seed Library Map.

Explore the Map
Search the map to find other folks in similar regions or at the same type of location.

Seed Library Networks
Check out the other seed library networks & learn about how you can create your own.

Gardening

Mar. 13th, 2026 07:22 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Seed Library Network
This website has extensive resources on seed libraries and seed swaps.

Seed the Map
Is your seed library open? Take 5 minutes to get on the Global Seed Library Map.

Explore the Map
Search the map to find other folks in similar regions or at the same type of location.

Seed Library Networks
Check out the other seed library networks & learn about how you can create your own.

Collage Journaling: tangerine

Mar. 13th, 2026 08:32 pm
stonepicnicking_okapi: journal (journal)
[personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi
A simple but nice cover of a birthday card for a friend featuring the tangerine stickers I saved from my Chinese New Year pack.

rebeccmeister: (Default)
[personal profile] rebeccmeister
The cats are now at 4, I am still at zero, according to my arbitrary scorekeeping method.

I had the hypothesis that maybe George had managed to squeeze out through the catio's doorway, so I propped a paving stone against the door. But when I went to check on the cats, there he was, right outside, vigorously rubbing up against the neighbor's juniper tree (marking territory, is my guess).

That means he might have figured out a way to climb out.

He was not very happy when I let Martha stay outside for a bit longer by herself. She was content to sit on the foundation ledge near the window and watch things.

This week wound up feeling pretty hectic, I think because it's the start of registration advising season, and also because I needed to help one of my research students finalize their poster presentation for a regional conference happening on Sunday (on top of wrapping up lab report grading, which was accomplished eventually). I have two students presenting their research, and we are also participating in a Bug Expo event. Good and fun, but busy.

trying to run the gauntlet

Mar. 13th, 2026 07:21 pm
musesfool: drs abbot and robby of the pitt (you did not desert me)
[personal profile] musesfool
I finally got some Minute Maid frozen orange juice concentrate and Orange Julius take 2 is way better than the watery version I made last month. Woo!

Tomorrow, I have to get up early and bake Irish soda bread to take to the family - we are going out for St. Patrick's Day dinner (and also the NINTH[!!!!!] anniversary of my father's death - it is his recipe I use; I miss him a lot).

TV quick takes:

Shrinking: spoilers ) Anyway, the first few episodes of this show are a little tough to take but it has morphed into a funny, endearing, poignant hangout comedy and I recommend it! Harrison Ford is SO GOOD in it too.

The Pitt: spoilers )

I am very interested to see where the rest of this season is going.

*

Friday Update

Mar. 13th, 2026 07:08 pm
moon_custafer: neon cat mask (Default)
[personal profile] moon_custafer
Got a temp contract starting Tuesday, as an admin assistant at the offices of a construction company. I plan to overdye my hair back to brown till I can figure out what the unspoken dress code is—“business casual” can mean just about anything. Mind you, at my last long-term job, also construction-adjacent, the head of Payroll mainly wore hoodies with classic-rock logos on them and had both his ears pierced. In any case I feel like changing up my hair a little. Was going to dye it today but the weather dissuaded me from shopping.

Watched the National Theatre’s production of The Importance of Being Earnest last night. It’s up on YouTube till the 18th if you want to watch it too. Heard of it because Ncuti Gatwa plays Algernon, and he’s excellent, but Sharon D. Clarke as Lady Bracknell is amazing.

4:10 pm

Mar. 13th, 2026 04:10 pm
susandennis: (Default)
[personal profile] susandennis
We still have tons of snow. But, we are seriously lacking tons of electricity. Puget Sound Power shows most of Issaquah and the surrounding areas are all dead zones with no ETA. Timber Ridge is not dead thanks to a marvelous generator but... We have lights in the hallways and power outlets in the elbows and the elevators work and the kitchen works.

But... no power in our apartments. I, somehow, am getting a teensy bit of wifi and I have my phone which does pretty good for internet except in the bedroom.

They can rig the generator to include hot water if this goes on for days. Last time it was 6 days.

Also last time, as soon as the power went out, Bonny packed up and went to her daughters. But, now her daughter is not speaking to her. OOOOPS Jackie has worked for weeks on a gynormous Kiwanis charity dinner tonight which will now not happen. Jim Down the Hall leaves in the morning for a massive road trip with his son, IF they can get out of Issaquah! He told me tonight that he plans to hook up with my brother!

Jim across the hall is now pretty convinced, I hope, that it's more than just him and he didn't cause it.

I have my emergency lights, two lanterns, spare batteries and a big battery that takes nearly any kind of plug there is and I can recharge it in the elbow if need be. So... all is sure not terrible.

And... it's still snowing!

Daily Check In.

Mar. 13th, 2026 06:18 pm
adafrog: (Default)
[personal profile] adafrog posting in [community profile] fandom_checkin
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Friday to midnight on Saturday (8pm Eastern Time).


Poll #34363 Daily poll
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 19

How are you doing?

I am okay
9 (47.4%)

I am not okay, but don't need help right now
10 (52.6%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans are you living with?

I am living single
7 (36.8%)

One other person
7 (36.8%)

More than one other person
5 (26.3%)




Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.

Madame Bovary

Mar. 14th, 2026 09:12 am
lucymonster: (bookcuppa)
[personal profile] lucymonster
In the early part of the nineteenth century, Emma, a farmer's daughter from a tiny rural French village, consents to marry Charles Bovary, a cheerfully mediocre country doctor who fell in love with her while treating her father's broken leg. Emma has grown up an avid reader of romances and sentimental poetry; her head is full of passionate, idyllic expectations to which the humble realities of her life as Madame Bovary fail utterly to measure up. She sinks into a deep depression, spends profligately to assuage her existential boredom, and embarks on a series of adulterous affairs as she nurses an ever-deepening contempt for her adoring but unexciting husband.

I enormously enjoyed almost all of this book. I say "almost" because the ending was not enjoyable at all, but I admire and respect and agree with the way everything concluded even if it didn't exactly spark joy. Honestly, if there is such a thing as a perfect novel, this one might just be that; every part of it is executed smoothly, effectively and with magnificent literary flare.

I cannot overstate the loveliness of Flaubert's prose. I read it in English (the 1886 Eleanor Marx-Aveling version, specifically) but even in translation it was impossible not to appreciate how clean and finely tuned the use of language is. There's a cinematic quality to everything, a vivid precision, that fills each scene to bursting with evocative imagery but never once tips over into excess. The writing is also unflaggingly witty and wry, but in an understated way, not harsh or cynical; Madame Bovary receives no quarter for her terrible decisions but I also never felt like Flaubert lacked compassion for her.

On the contrary, her downfall arises from the most painfully human emotional state: she takes for granted what she has, and exaggerates the value of what she doesn't. The life Emma Bovary was born to was one of comfortable ordinariness: she is secure but not wealthy, clever but not brilliant, loved warmly and unconditionally but without passion. But her peaceful life is worthless to her, and the idea of happiness being derived from within never even seems to occur to her. She craves drama, romance, specialness, and feels hard done by when life fails to deliver it to her. She attributes her feelings of emptiness and dissatisfaction to some inadequacy of her life circumstances: if she only possessed XYZ trappings of wealth, or if only a suitably passionate lover arrived to sweep her off her feet, all her misery would evaporate and she'd finally experience true happiness. And when the expensive goods and the torrid affairs fail to make her happy, instead of realising the fundamental flaw in her philosophy, she doubles down harder and keeps chasing that next, bigger, stronger hit that will surely satisfy her hunger at last.

Flaubert is extremely funny about the disconnect between Madame Bovary's pretensions and her material life circumstances. I want to quote the whole several pages in which a lover's impassioned declarations to her are interwoven with the proceedings of a local agricultural fair going on outside the window of their love-nest, but I'll satisfy myself with this short excerpt:

'Thus we,' he said, 'why did we come to know one another? What chance willed it? It was because across the infinite, like two streams that flow but to unite, our special bents of mind had driven us towards each other.'
And he seized her hand; she did not withdraw it.
'For good farming generally!' cried the president.
'Just now, for example, when I went to your house-'
'To Monsieur Bizat of Quincampoix-'
'Did I know I should accompany you?'
'Seventy francs.'
'A hundred times I wished to go; and I followed you - I remained.'
'Manures!'
'And I shall remain tonight, tomorrow, all other days, all my life!'
'To Monsieur Caron of Argueil, a gold medal!'


The whole book is in this tone, more or less. It's utterly delightful.

(no subject)

Mar. 13th, 2026 02:36 pm
cupcake_goth: (Vampire Governess)
[personal profile] cupcake_goth
It's snowing. In March. Sure, why not. 

---

In screaming fangirl news, AMC announced the June 7th premier date for The Vampire Lestat, posted the opening credits to YouTube, and released the second single. I DON'T WANT TO WAIT I WANT ALL OF IT NOW. 

---

Speaking of vampires -- you know, one of my default states of being -- I have decided that a way to bring myself more joy is to lean into my pink and black aesthetic, with more of a vampire governess vibe. Because I've needed distraction recently, I made a Pinterest board. I may spend part of this weekend reworking my pink wide brimmed hat that has bat lace appliques on the underside of the brim and making a pink lace jabot. 

---

Even more vampires: I spent last night reading a fantastic AU Hannibal/True Blood fic, only to get to the last chapter that was a note from the author saying they would no longer be updating the story as they have left the Hannibal fandom. DAMMIT.

---

Health stuff: I've been having bouts of stomach bloating and pain (mostly after I eat something) for no real reason I can identify, so I tried an experiment: for the past few days, I didn't have anything with cheese, and lo, everything was fine. Today I added cheese to the exact same thing I had for yesterday's lunch, and guess what? If I have become digestively sensitive to cheese, I want to punch a divine being in the face multiple times. Cheese my beloved, don't hurt me!

veronyxk84: (Vero#DemirViola)
[personal profile] veronyxk84 posting in [community profile] 100words
Title: Shower Emergency
Fandom: Viola come il mare (Italian TV series)
Author: [personal profile] veronyxk84
Pairing: Viola Vitale/Francesco Demir
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: none
Word count: 100 (Ellipsus)
Spoilers/Setting: Set during S1.
Summary: An innocent request reveals that Viola has already taken over half of Francesco’s home.
Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction created for fun and no profit has been made. All rights belong to the respective owners.

Challenge: #485 - Innocent

Crossposted: [community profile] anythingdrabble, My journal (with bonus Italian version), “Chiamami Ancora Amore” - the Series


READ: Shower Emergency )

☙ ☙ ☙

61 Heated Rivalry icons

Mar. 13th, 2026 08:52 pm
immortalje: Shane Hollander and Ilya Rozanov at face off in two levels (one per person) ([hr] shaneilya : face off levels)
[personal profile] immortalje posting in [community profile] fandom_icons
I have 61 Heated Rivalry icons to share. In the post you can find:
- 32 Shane Hollander/Ilya Rozanov
- 15 Ilya Rozanov
- 11 Shane Hollander
- 2 Svetlana Vetrova
- 1 Scott Hunter/Kip Grady

Preview:


Here @ [community profile] love_sacrificed

It's a Beginning;>

Mar. 13th, 2026 03:28 pm
mdehners: (totoro)
[personal profile] mdehners posting in [community profile] gardening
Got some Garden-related stuff done the last 2 days. Planted a Saskatoon bush in a container and moved a few seedlings into 3" pots from the trays. My Fig cutting is showing buds along the stem but I'm not tempted to even look until April;>
Giant and Bronze Fennels, Variegated Lunaria(though no sign of it at present). The Giant isn't edible but looks really kewl the 2nd yr when it blooms about 10-12 ft tall! Next week a few more should be ready to bump up to larger pots just in time for the next batch of Stratified seeds to be ready to plant...
Cheers,
Pat
starandrea: (Default)
[personal profile] starandrea
♥ The daffodils are up!!

picture )

♥ And irises, my favorite.

picture )

♥ Plus a fun mystery: I'm like 80% sure I planted crocuses here. Before yesterday I was 100% sure, but what's coming up does not look like crocuses. What will these clever sprouts turn out to be, I wonder. (Scilla?)

picture )

And now a spring planting calendar update.

♥ Dahlias were potted March 5. The first one stuck its head above soil today and I quickly transferred it from the dark floor of the utility room to a bright succulent shelf. (In other words, I continue to not plan lights for the dahlias.)

It has been one week since they were potted. Nine weeks remain until our frost-free date. For everyone's entertainment and my hope of making better decisions next year, I am tracking dahlia size versus time remaining before they can go outside.

picture )

♥ Cannas remain in boxes by the back door. No substantive growth I can see; I'm checking them every few days. Temperature is higher than I'd like but steady between 55-60F. Anything below 60 seems to keep them sleeping. Garage temperature was freezing last night and will probably go colder next week, so not yet a better option. If they can stay dormant until the ground unfreezes, I should be able to put most of them in front of the patio where they were last year and let them wake up naturally in May.

♥ Winter sown seeds seem to be behaving themselves, no early germination or wild parties that I've noticed. The containers were seeded Feb 18-21, so it's been about three weeks. At least some of the seeds in there need cold stratification, and I think four weeks is the bare minimum for forcing. For most seeds, 6-12 weeks is recommended. Fortunately it's going to be cold next week, so they'll definitely get their four. After that I'll keep them out of the sun until the end of March and hope for the best.

♥ The six boxes of bulbs I bought accidentally, thinking I would "winter sow" them, have been in the refrigerator for four weeks this weekend. At this rate they should be okay to go in the ground as soon as it unfreezes enough to dig. Whew. (They all require cold stratification, but only to bloom, so even if they don't get enough cold they should be able to put up some leaves and collect energy for next year.)

In unrelated news, Marci and I went to the aquarium yesterday and we both got t-shirts with a manta ray on them that say "just a ray of sunshine." I left mine on the sofa last night and Daphne has been sleeping on it ever since.

Ibogaine.

Mar. 13th, 2026 06:51 pm
[syndicated profile] languagehat_feed

Posted by languagehat

Herewith another Languagehat Poll combined with a Languagehat Gripe. I was reading the latest article about ibogaine, which may or may not be a wonder drug, when it occurred to me to wonder about the etymology and pronunciation. I had always mentally said /ˈaɪboˌgeɪn/ (EYE-bo-gain; I use /o/ because I don’t reduce it as far as /ə/), but I didn’t remember if I’d heard that somewhere or just invented it. So I looked around and discovered that the etymology was (per AHD):

[French ibogaïne, from New Latin (Tabernanthē) iboga, species name of shrub in whose root it is found, probably ultimately from Ghetsogho (Bantu language of Gabon) ibogha; akin to boghaga, to cure.]

So far so good, and it even had a derivation within Tsogo. But I was appalled to see that the pronunciation given was (ĭ-bōgə-ēn′, -ĭn). Had I been flagrantly mispronouncing it for years? I checked OED: “/ɪˈbəʊɡəiːn/ ib-OH-guh-een.” And M-W? “i-ˈbō-gə-ˌēn.” It wasn’t looking good — I was going to have to retrain my brain. But then I thought “let me check video clips and make sure,” and lo and behold, every one of them, even those with experts speaking, used my untutored version, EYE-bogain. So now I was pissed: the dictionaries were conspiring to hoodwink their users and try to get them to use their fake pronunciation! I turn to the Varied Reader — if you are familiar with the word, how do you say it? And have you heard anyone say it the dictionary-approved (and very unnatural) way (ih-BOH-guh-een)?

(no subject)

Mar. 13th, 2026 07:45 pm
einbeistrich: Photo of William Beckett, singer from The Academy Is... He's wearing red glasses and posing by pulling a strand of hair (Default)
[personal profile] einbeistrich
I can't stop crying. I don't want to let it go.
github: shadowy octopus with the head of a robot, emblazoned with the Dreamwidth swirl (Default)
[personal profile] github posting in [site community profile] changelog

Branch: refs/heads/main Home: https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth Commit: badf5eae7a944fed8e8381ee3dff2238633191c6 https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth/commit/badf5eae7a944fed8e8381ee3dff2238633191c6 Author: Mark Smith mark@dreamwidth.org Date: 2026-03-13 (Fri, 13 Mar 2026)

Changed paths: M etc/docker/web22/Dockerfile M etc/docker/web22/config/etc/varnish/dreamwidth.vcl M etc/docker/web22/scripts/startup-prod.sh

Log Message:


Replace Apache with Starman behind Varnish on web22

Varnish now forwards to Starman on port 8080 instead of Apache on port 80. This removes Apache from the web22 request path entirely, with Varnish's caching layer helping absorb health check traffic that previously queued behind busy Starman workers.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 noreply@anthropic.com

To unsubscribe from these emails, change your notification settings at https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth/settings/notifications

pegkerr: (All we have to decide is what to do with)
[personal profile] pegkerr
As I have referred to obliquely before, I am Doing Something with regard to the events in Minneapolis/St. Paul.

Signal


I was pulled in as a volunteer, oh, perhaps a month and a half ago. I was asked to set up the project, and despite my genuine nervousness at the responsibility I was handed, I did. I analyzed what needed to get done, wrote documentation to describe the process, and handled it alone for three days. Then more volunteers were added, and I was asked to train them. Then the team was doubled again, and I had to train them, too, and incorporate them into the team. Then I had to set up a couple of subteams, hold standup meetings, and start thinking about process, team building, donor relations, technological security, resource sharing, and budget.

Rather to my astonishment, now that I have retired, I have become for the first time in my career, no kidding, an actual manager, overseeing a team of ten people.

Over the last week, things have ratcheted up, and the phrase "It's like herding cats" has definitely floated across my mind.

I've been told I'm rather good at it. But it's a bit daunting. I'm definitely spending more hours at it than I spent at my job at the Synod.

Wow. I'm an actual manager. Who knew?

Image description: Lower third: a double monitor showing a world map, and a hand holding a phone, also showing a map. Center: a hand holds a marker writing the words "Project Planning" in red letters. Just below stands a row of cats, lurching forward in an uneven line. Upper right: a partial view of a woman with the word "Manager" superimposed over her. Upper left: Signal icon.

Manager

10 Manager

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Posted by DC Pierson

First of all, I must thank the comb. And the brush! And my God, the bowl full of mush! My warriors. My champions. This award will be next to you on the bedside table VERY soon.

And thanks to the Great Green Room for giving our little ensemble a place to work, to play, to be.

To my fellow nominees, I wish I could go back and tell myself, as an even littler bunny, that someday I’d be in the same category as Madeline from Madeline and Poop from Everybody Poops.

Speaking of legends, when I told the quiet old lady whispering “hush” what an honor it was to work with her, guess what she whispered? Yeah. Now, THAT’S humility.

And the picture of the cow jumping over the moon: You ARE art. Literally.

Now, there were rumors about the young mouse and me not getting along, so let’s put those to rest right now: Goodnight, rumors!

Little toy house? More like little toy home. And where are the three little bears sitting on chairs? Stand up, my loves! See? They can also do that.

I was so inspired by the pair of mittens. They carved out their own moments on every page. Everyone, go back and read the book just for the mittens—whole different experience.

The telephone didn’t ring once. Truly a fearless protector of the process.

And when things got heavy, the two little kittens were there to remind us, “Hey, we’re not operating Mike Mulligan’s steam shovel here. This is supposed to be fun.”

Who else? Ah, the red balloon. You showed an entertainment industry that wants red balloons to be creepy, or at the very least French, that you can also just be in a corner.

I’d be kicking myself if I didn’t use this platform for the greater good, and my legs are VERY powerful. So this sleepy bunny is gonna wake you all up to the dangers of fracking. In her seminal environmental work Silent Spring, Rachel Carson wrote—

Aaaand there’s the “wrap-it-up” music. Heard it a second before the rest of you ’cause of the ears. Who’m I forgetting? Thank you, “Nobody”! You are just the opposite! Thank you, stars! Thank you, air! Thank you, noises everywhere!

And Gregory McKnight at UTA.

Okay, that’s enough. Me, go to bed!

susandennis: (Default)
[personal profile] susandennis
Well, that was an adventure! By the time I got my car out of the garage it has stopped not snowing. It was actually coming down fairly steadily in huge flakes. But, I ventured on, slowly. I had left way early. I didn't have any trouble really. Until I got out of the car. I have boots. But 1. They are way up high in the closet and not worth the trouble getting down and then I was going to have to take one off when I got there anyway plus 2. I forgot.

It was wet and slushy and felt pretty slippery but I made it inside. And was greeted warmly by the receptionist who thanked me for coming on in! I got all entered into the system and paid my copay and then went upstairs to my doctor's waiting room. Before I could even match butt to chair, I heard "Susan?!". I laughed at her and complained that last time she did not even let me get my game up on my phone and this time I didn't even get to sit down! She countered with "more bad news, he's all ready for you."

I was back in my car by 8 am for my 7:50 appointment in the snow! I went downtown and picked up my packages and then stopped at UPS to turn in my returns and then home.

Still snowing and there were a couple of dicey spots. I had a hard time get out of the parking spot in one case and then, I was stopped, on a hill, waiting to turn left and slid a little. So I was very glad to get to my garage door. But then it wouldn't open. No big deal. I called security and he came down, opened the door, and pointed out that had I just cleared the snow off my license plate, the door would have opened fine. And it was the security guard who doesn't really like me anyway. Another notch on his belt. Bone. Head.

I did not get gas. Another day. It will be more expensive but around here, it's always expensive so big whop. On the news last night, they said that gas might soon be up to $4 a gallon. It's been $4 a gallon here for several years.

It is now 10 am and it is still coming down. (The receptionist at the doctor's office said she heard it was supposed to go until noon.) It's very pretty. I've killed the rest of the morning just piddling around on the internet while watching the snow fall. I gotta say, it's not a bad way to waste time.

I may do some more of it.

20260313_061832-COLLAGE
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[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

Note: All my posts on this subject carry the "Sandra Peabody" tag. If you wish to avoid it, then please feel free to ignore posts with that tag.

As you'll know if you've been following my posts for a few months, I have unexpectedly found myself with a deep interest in the abusive production conditions of Wes Craven's The Last House on the Left (1972). In 1997 with a second edition in 2000 (the one I own), David Szulkin's book Wes Craven's Last House on the Left: The Making of a Cult Classic appeared from British publisher FAB Press. It is the only place star Sandra Peabody (also known here as Sandra Cassell) has ever spoken on the record about the movie.

During the chronological chapter following how the film was made, inevitably one segment focused on the pivotal scene where Krug (the lead villain) rapes Mari (a kidnapped young woman). Szulkin asked four people involved for their thoughts. Their quotes were presented without editorial framing. I have added each person's position on set after their name, but otherwise they are verbatim. The square brackets are in the original. "Lucy" is Lucy Grantham, not in this scene but playing Phyllis, another kidnapped young woman in the story.

Wes Craven, director: "You know, the character of Mari took an enormous amount of abuse. I liked Sandra Peabody a lot; I thought she was very pretty, and very plucky... because she was a very young actress, she wasn't nearly as confident and easygoing as Lucy was, and she had become involved in something that was very, very rough. And she hung in there. When the character was raped, she was treated very roughly, and I know Sandra said to me afterwards, 'My God... I had the feeling they really hated me.'"

Sandra Cassell, Mari: "No comment."

David Hess, Krug: "That was a difficult scene, because my style of acting is to go over the edge during rehearsal... to push it as far as I can possibly push it, just to see how far I can go. And then I set my parameters. Once I draw that box, once I have those boundaries, then I'm free to do whatever I want within my character. I think I frightened her a few times... I actually got pretty physical with her. She may have been a little bit intimidated, because she couldn't back off when the camera was running."

Yvonne Hannemann, assistant director: "That one scene was really quite upsetting. I know Sandra had to be consoled; it really got very rough. And I think they [the actors] all got very emotional. Of course, David Hess was just so frightening, that a lot of the acting was sort of method acting."

Birdfeeding

Mar. 13th, 2026 11:28 am
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[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is partly cloudy and chilly with blustery wind.

I fed the birds.  I've seen several sparrows and house finches plus a mourning dove.

I put out water for the birds.

3/13/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

3/13/26 -- I moved the 16 water jug greenhouses from the parking lot to near the barrel garden.  Many of them have sprouts inside now!  :D

3/13/26 -- I trimmed brush along the north side of the house.

I am done for the night.

AMA: Publishing Fanfiction?!

Mar. 13th, 2026 12:00 pm
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[personal profile] duckprintspress
https://www.tiktok.com/@duckprintspress/video/7616760976498511134?_r=1&_t=ZP-94eqYeuCWjO

(Video ID: a white person with short reddish hair and gold-rimmed glasses sits before a bookshelf and speaks. /end ID)

Transcript: How do you feel, given Duck Prints Press’s mission statement and origin, about publishing books that are proudly “serial number filed off” fanfiction?

So, for people who aren’t familiar with that term, it just means somebody took a fanfic and, like, used find-and-replace to change the characters names and now are marketing it as original fiction. So if it was, I don’t know, Castiel and Dean – to use my own example – not that I’ve filed off serial numbers but I have written a lot of Destiel – then, you know, maybe Dean becomes some guy named Mitch, and Cas becomes, you know, Richard, and Mitch and Richard have their romance for the ages.

In this “original work,” how do I feel about it? I think it depends. I think it can be well done. I certainly – I don’t wanna name names, but I’ve been in fandom long enough that I know of major published works that were fanfic that are not widely known to have been fanfic and are very popular and are not getting, the, “oh, it’s got the serial numbers filed off, it’s bad.”

I think, just like most kinds of writings, it can be well done, it can be poorly done. I know as an author, at a point when I was having trouble making words on original work, I would write – I mostly write alternative universes, often very very far from the founding material. And part of the reason I did that was with the expectation that someday I would file the serial numbers off my own work. And it’s relatively easy to do when it’s very far from canon. That said, I think needs to be more than just a find-and-replace.

There’s things that work in fanfiction that won’t make sense if it’s an original fiction. If it’s poorly done, if those things aren’t changed, then it’s gonna read like fanfiction even if – you know – every will know, if I – I used Dean and Castiel as an example. If Dean – I mean if Mitch is still a monster hunter, and Richard is still an angel of the lord, it’s going to be pretty damn obvious that it was Supernatural fanfic, and that’s not necessarily gonna be that entertaining for people to read if they’re not interested in the fandom.

On the other hand, you know, I know of a Dean/Cas work that got remade as femslash – as sapphic – and completely rewritten. It’s a completely different book now even tho it has the same basic story and that’s bad in and of itself. So, what I think about it is – it really depends.

I think when they lean-in on that part for the marketing, though, that’s a little awkward. I feel like if any fan author did what tradpub is doing with “it’s actually Dramione” which is the ship for Draco Malfoy and Hermione. Or, you know, this was very clearly Reylo – which is Kylo Ren and Rey from Star Wars. Like… if any of us did that, we’d get our butts sued off. And it’s a little obnoxious to see places that are bigger than us taking advantage of that part of fandom culture in a way that fans never actually could. And that’s quite aside from whether or not they’re good books or bad books, because I think trying to say it’s okay when they’re good and it’s bad when they’re bad is actually not maybe the best framework for it.

But, yeah, sorry, I could keep going. I have strong opinions about fandom stuff. Basically, I think it can be done well. I think it can be done poorly. I don’t love the way it’s being marketed.

This is an Ask Me Anything. I’m Claire, the owner of Duck Prints Press. Hit me up if you have any questions!


Crafts

Mar. 13th, 2026 11:01 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
New Worlds: Miscellaneous Arts

Throughout the art sections of this Patreon, I've been grouping them into broad categories: visual arts, performing arts, literary arts, and so forth. But what about the arts that are kinda of . . . none of the above?


This is a fun ramble through many different arts and crafts.
[syndicated profile] mcsweeneys_feed

Posted by Jenny O'Dell

- - -

Four conversations with writers and artists about the role that athletics and training play in their creative lives, featuring Marcus Burke, R. O. Kwon, Alexis Madrigal, and Daniel Alarcón

- - -

During my senior year of high school, a guidance counselor who had it in for me gleefully noticed I was missing a semester’s worth of PE. I still have the paper on the Cupertino High School letterhead, informing my parents that I was in danger of not graduating. Under “Notes,” the counselor wrote, “Jennifer must pass bowling.” So extreme was my distaste for sports and physical activity that of the three options given to me, which included regular PE or weight lifting, I had chosen the third: driving to Homestead Bowl at 6:30 every morning of that semester.

Other than during a brief period, in my twenties, of braving the elliptical machines at the Embarcadero YMCA in San Francisco, and drunken dancing at a party called Sweater Funk, this distaste did not wear off. If anything, it matured into something more sweeping: Exercise, gyms, and sports in general were like parts of a video game that failed to render. They just didn’t exist to me. Relatedly, I was uninterested in what my body, with its cryptic aches and pains, might have been trying to communicate. I remember politely nodding but privately balking at a therapist whom I saw for a short stint, because she kept asking me where I felt emotions in my body. Why would she say something like that, when we all knew emotions happened in your head, the only place that really mattered?

Then, about two years ago, I started going to a personal trainer down the street from where I lived. I was nearing forty and getting assailed by articles about how my bones were about to deteriorate. But I was too scared to go to the gym, which at this point felt like picking up a book in a foreign language. I thought my trainer might be like a kind of translator, easing me into it. And she was, patiently directing me toward various contraptions and monitoring me for bad form, overexertion, and, more important, despair.

Some months later, feeling emboldened, I took my derelict Bianchi to the repair shop, and contemplated riding it into the East Bay Hills. A friend had suggested Old Tunnel Road. But what they hadn’t mentioned was an unforgiving slog along Broadway before you even get to that road. On the hot September day when I finally tried this ride, I found myself gasping for air, and felt like my brain was being squeezed between mattresses. Because of the topography and the adjacent freeway, the route is something of an optical illusion: It seems flat, and Old Tunnel in the distance looks far steeper than it is.

An old, dependable inner voice saw its cue. Look at you. You’re not even at the hard part and you’re tired. This is embarrassing! Don’t ever try—or even speak of—this again.

But then, to my genuine surprise, a completely unfamiliar voice shouldered that one aside. OK, but what if we try just making it to that stoplight? If you get there and you really don’t feel good, we can turn around and go home. But I bet you’ll be fine after a little break.

This foreign encouragement was so jarring that it took me a moment to recognize what it was: my trainer’s voice. And it wasn’t just on this ride that I heard it. Whenever I felt overwhelmed by the scope of a book project I’d taken on, or daunted by the unfamiliar things it required me to try, my old self-berating perfectionism would give way to something new: an inner monologue that not only didn’t think I was a complete moron, but also was attentive to my body, my brain, and their interface. Thanks to my trainer, when I finally went off to the gym by myself, my workouts continued to be object lessons in a kindly self-awareness and the slow but sure nature of training that, on an everyday level, shares so much with the process of writing a book.

I’m hopeful that my bones are deteriorating at a slightly slower pace, but what I found by entering this world was so much more: a different kind of self-conception and self-regard, a broader definition of intelligence, and a general respect for the world of athletics. (I even own an Oakland Ballers hat now.) I also became interested in talking to other artists and writers about the way athletics informs their own creative lives. Were there any surprising translations between the two contexts, as there had been for me? What did a sports practice allow them to do or think in their writing practice that they couldn’t have otherwise? And if we were to dissolve the false dichotomy of art and sports, what would it allow us to see?

—Jenny Odell

- - -

MARCUS BURKE
[WRITER]

  • Athletic activity: Basketball
  • Practiced from: 1995–2010
  • Preferred hours: At night when the world felt quiet
  • Frequency and duration: Almost every day. Even if I didn’t play, I’d dribble the ball outside my house.
  • Accomplishments: 4 years of college basketball; starter senior year
  • Highest scoring season: Senior year, I averaged 9 points and 5 rebounds.
- - -

MARCUS BURKE: I was a college basketball player during the four years I worked on my first book. So I would have to write in strange places. There’d be times I would be writing in the back of the bus on the way to games. My coach just couldn’t put it together between me being a writer and also an athlete. If I messed up a play, he’d just be like, “Marcus, this isn’t a draft. You don’t get another draft of this play.” [Laughs]

THE BELIEVER: I mean, there is a difference between practice and performance, right? Like in sports, what I see as a spectator is all performance, but I imagine that from the practice side of things it’s incredibly repetitive.

MB: That’s where I feel like writing and sports correlate. I have one book out, which means the world has seen one of my works. I put that book out eleven or twelve years ago. Nobody sees the amount of time it takes to actually put all that together. It can look like you’re doing nothing. And I feel like with training, when it comes to basketball, it’s almost like when you have to take a game-winning shot and somebody says, “Oh my gosh, how did you make that shot?” And it’s like, “Because I’ve taken that shot a thousand times.”

With writing, you kind of have to stay in it, in the same way that if you want to be in shape as an athlete, you have to continue to train and train and train. And there are different aspects. For example, I feel like reading is like the weight lifting of writing. Because sometimes it can be arduous. It’s making you better, but you don’t necessarily feel the payoff initially, as you’re engaged in the act. And it only shows up later in this mysterious way, if at all.

BLVR: [Laughs] Right, it might not. I feel like with writing there’s this notion right now—and this isn’t even getting into AI—that you could just become something overnight. There’s this lack of patience and commitment and acknowledgment that it takes a long time, it’s intensely private, and it can be really lonely.

MB: I grew up in a funky situation where the group of kids that were around me—what became of us wasn’t good, you know? And I think back on those times and how I didn’t get lost in the sauce the way some of my peers did. It was because of basketball. I think about a lot of those lonely nights of, like, doing ball handling in the streets. I remember those lonely times when it’s very similar to writing, like you have to love it when things are going on and when nothing is going on.

BLVR: It reminds me of something I’ve been thinking about a lot lately, which is writerly stamina. And I’m like, What actually is that? I think for me, it’s partially an attitude toward small failures.

MB: With writing, there’s things that give you moments of pause, where you’re just like, Hm. OK, I have a thing. I can change it. Moving on. You kind of have to take a look and keep on thinking.

For me, the transition was dealing with not being physically tired, but being mentally tired, where I haven’t worked my body today, but I’ve worked my brain supremely. It was learning how to get that writerly stamina. I have kids now, and I teach at Texas Tech, so I don’t get to write every day. But I try to as much as I can, just because I feel it’s like a muscle that weakens if you don’t work it. Especially with working on a book, you’re strongest when you’re hitting it every day.

I look at reading season and writing season in the same way I would look at preseason, postseason, and season. They’re like different modes, and they kind of correlate with basketball. When I’m in a reading season, it’s because I need to refortify the fortress, you know? I need to take in some new work, take in some new ideas. See how people are doing it. To me, that’s like the training, right? And then you hit a point when you’re a little full, when you’re like, Now I need to just go do the thing.

BLVR: Do you think a certain love of the game also plays a role here?

MB: To me, the key correlation between writing and basketball is that you have this compulsion and it defies logic, in a way, because you just do it. And it’s going to be hard; it might suck. But nonetheless, this is the hill you’re going to die on. For me, life would be crazy, but I’d always find my way back to the basketball court. No matter what was going on, I could always go shoot around; I could always find my way back. And I feel very similarly about writing now: that it’s a place of both comfort and great anxiety.

I feel like the best place is when you’re in the midst of working and you’re just receiving and downloading your story to your page. You’re not thinking about word choice; you’re not worried about structure. You’re just putting it down.

To me, that’s like game time, when you’re playing on autopilot. You’ve done all the training, you’ve done all the stuff. And it’s just time to go be active in the craft. You go out there and produce because you’ve trained for all the situations and everything. I feel like the compulsion is what really keeps you in the vocation and allows you to show up for those moments of glory. Because they’re so short-lived—it’s like an eclipse, you know? [Laughs] So much goes into being able to say, This book is done now, or We won a championship. Nobody sees you getting up at 6 a.m. to work out. Nobody sees all those late nights and early mornings and just having to weather the emotional storm of it. Because I feel like for a lot of people, you know, that in itself would take them out.

I remember when I was giving my speech to the team on senior night during college, saying to them, “A season’s never a season unless you think about quitting a couple of times.” And everybody in the room, shamefully, was just like resigned nodding. And I was like, “I know you thought about quitting. Don’t lie and act like you ain’t thought about quitting.” But we’re all here because we didn’t quit, you know? I’ve been working on my novel for, like, a decade now. And I think I’m getting close to finishing it. I’m praying I’m getting close to finishing it. But nonetheless, the baseline resolve is: It will be done when it’s done, and quitting is not on the table.

It’s like what I was telling my students: “The training is the training. If you don’t like it, you can stop, and nobody’s mad at you for that.” There are no false kings in the game. You have to sit down, you have to write your book, and nobody can do that for you. Whatever you need to do to game yourself up to do that. There’s no hate from my end, but I guess I like an athletic approach to things. Which is just to say that I look at it like: It’s work. Do it. And the more you give it, the more it’ll give you.

BLVR: Yeah, and it’ll be meaningful because of that, because no one gave it to you. It’s yours.

MB: And nobody can take it.

- - -

Continue reading the rest of these conversatiuons over at The Believer.

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