case: (Default)
Case ([personal profile] case) wrote in [community profile] fandomsecrets2025-12-28 03:51 pm

[ SECRET POST #6932 ]


⌈ Secret Post #6932 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.



More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 00 pages, 00 secrets from Secret Submission Post #990.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
osprey_archer: (art)
osprey_archer ([personal profile] osprey_archer) wrote2025-12-28 03:47 pm
Entry tags:

Conclave

A last-minute entry to movies I watched in 2025! When I popped into the library yesterday, there was Conclave sitting on the New DVDs shelf, so of course I snatched it up and took it right home and watched it.

Conclave is about a fictional modern-day conclave to elect a new pope, and I’ve been chomping at the bit to see it since it came out because… I guess I am just into movies about the Catholic church… I don’t fully understand this about myself. It may just be the aesthetic. Gold! Red! Shiny things! Lots of candles! One can criticize many things about the Catholic Church but by God they’ve got a look.

Anyway, cardinals converge on Rome, all wearing their cardinal gear, and if like me you enjoy things like aerial shots of cardinals carrying white parasols crossing the courtyard of a vast church complex, you will find great visual delight in this movie. And the movie doesn’t bog down in explaining things like the white parasols either. We don’t need to know why they’re part of the cardinal’s vestments.

The plot of the movie centers on the machinations to elect the new pope, featuring a bunch of guys who desperately want to be pope but also desperately need to pretend that they are being forced into pope candidacy against their will, because other people believe they are the best candidate. At one point in my life I would have scoffed at this hypocrisy, but having endured many years of Donald Trump on the public scene, I have come to believe that actually it’s quite politically useful for candidates to have to hang back until other people more or less drag them bodily into candidacy.

At the center of this is Ralph Fiennes, and I regret to inform you that I remember almost none of the character names from this movie, because I really struggle to tell people apart when they are all dressed the same and also all look pretty similar, in this case a bunch of old white guys with a smattering of old guys of other races.

Ralph Fiennes, as I was saying, is playing the guy who is in charge of making sure the election runs smoothly, and also perhaps awkwardly is one of the candidates - against his will, of course. (Perhaps slightly more sincerely against his will than some of the others.) I saw him about a year ago in the National Theater recording of Antony and Cleopatra, where he plays the sottish, running to seed, impulsive and still dangerous Antony, and his character here is just about the opposite in every way, which raised my respect for his acting ability even more.

He is calm, controlled, thoughtful, and deeply compassionate, a quality perhaps most clear in the scene where he points out to another cardinal that his hopes to be pope are toast. On the surface this action seems almost brutal, but that clarity allows the other cardinal to grieve his dreams in private, instead of hoping against hope and watching them get smashed in public.

An absorbing movie. I didn’t love it quite as much as I hoped to love it, but I greatly enjoyed watching it nonetheless.
bluapapilio: vita from duet night abyss (dna vita)
蝶になって ([personal profile] bluapapilio) wrote2025-12-28 02:31 pm

Game Check-in: Duet Night Abyss


A Rainbow-Coloured Dream (Fina event):

It's always weird in these games when the MC starts talking for themselves with a personality you wouldn't necessarily choose when you're in control. Vita ribbing on Outsider so much is pretty funny though. X'D



Can't believe Vita took Fina outside without telling Outsider?? And she was 20 levels lower than the mobs, and Vita wasn't much help only using his sword.

I've always liked powers that can create from imagination, like Ronan's from The Raven Boys.

What were they doing with the kidnapped kids??

We didn't get all the details about what happened with the Glennvilles, I wonder if we'll get it with an Outsider quest?

Meeting Zhiliu:

*smh* That ticket seller in the theatre digging himself into a deeper and deeper hole. Hope he gets fired. "Thoughtless lips invite trouble." you mean loose lips ink ships? X'D

Lol why is Snow standing off to the side in the viewing box, there's plenty of room on the seat. How come it played Phantasio's singing when it was Violetta singing? They could've just played the melody without the voice.

Zhiliu's phoxichor sensor reacted to Vita? 🤔

I don't care one way or another for her design.
mab_browne: Auckland beach, pohutukawa and a view of Rangitoto from a painting by Jennifer Cruden (Default)
Mab of the Antipodes ([personal profile] mab_browne) wrote2025-12-29 08:59 am

I had a lovely Xmas

And if I'm lucky I'll be over the worst of covid bout #2 before 2026 begins. At least this one, so far, is less vicious than bout #1.
Organization for Transformative Works ([syndicated profile] otw_news_feed) wrote2025-12-28 06:27 pm

OTW Signal, December 2025

Posted by Caitlynne

Every month in OTW Signal, we take a look at stories that connect to the OTW’s mission and projects, including issues related to legal matters, technology, academia, fannish history and preservation issues of fandom, fan culture, and transformative works.

In the News

Why some people are devoted to particular aspects of popular culture is a fundamental query in fan studies research. One common and familiar answer is that fandoms are like religions. A recent article offers a different approach to understanding the emotional intensity of fan devotion, suggesting that while fans often describe their devotion in terms that sound religious, this comparison “has some lingering issues that hamper the field.” The authors contend that we can compare specific elements of fan experience (e.g., rituals, symbols, shared practices, and collective identity) to “sacred experiences” without needing to imply that fandoms are literal religions.

We believe it is more accurate to conceptualize fan devotion as part of a broader landscape of sacred activities that transcend the concept of religion.

Elliott and Mowers assert that their results provide powerful evidence that many fans experience their interests as sacred.

Their interests occupy a unique and special place in their lives: They derive purpose and inspiration from them, they learn important values from them, they involve something powerful and important, and they inspire them to believe in something larger than themselves.

To support this claim, the researchers analyzed information gathered from surveys, interviews, and fan experiences at Comic Cons and identified a new framework for determining what makes fan experiences sacred-like. They argue that by studying and measuring these “sacred dimensions,” especially in contexts like conventions where fan devotion takes on almost ritual-like patterns, scholars can reevaluate the religion metaphor, focusing instead on analytic models that consider the complexity of fan experience. Through this process, researchers can better understand fan devotion and how fandom is shaped by this collective identity. This analysis helps frame fandom as a cultural practice with emotional, symbolic, and communal depth.


Reports from fan conventions across the globe reinforce the idea that physical gatherings become collective spaces where fans create meaning through shared experiences. In one example, recent reporting on Bengaluru Comic Con highlights the convergence of more than 50,000 fans gathering to celebrate their shared love for fandom. A Times of India article describes fans coming together in a vibrant pop culture playground: cosplaying, celebrating shared passions, and building community through creative expression. “For many attendees, Comic Con was as much about community as it was about pop culture.” In another report, Shefali Johnson, CEO of Comic Con India, explains how the fans are what make Bengaluru Comic Con so special: “People here come to listen, learn, connect and experience.” A story in the Deccan Herald describes the con as “a living mosaic of fandom,” where participation is an act of joy:

For many, the message was simple: this space belongs to everyone, regardless of age, fandom, or experience.

Events like these allow fans from all over the world to connect and share their passions, creating new sacred experiences together and building a strong collective identity.

OTW Tips

Transformative Works and Cultures, a project of the OTW, is an international, peer-reviewed academic journal that seeks to promote scholarship on fanworks and practices. The journal is published at least twice each year and invites submissions of papers in all areas. For more information, visit the TWC website.

Did you know the OTW attends fan conventions? Our volunteers represent the OTW at cons around the world. The OTW’s Con Outreach team, a division of the Communications committee, coordinated attendance at 10 gatherings across three continents in 2025, meeting fans and sharing games, gifts, fic prompts, and of course, our popular rec board, where everyone is invited to take a fic rec and leave one of their own. Our volunteers love to talk about fandom, so come see us and say hello!

Would you like to see the OTW at your local fan convention event? Contact our Communications committee and let us know!


We want your suggestions for the next OTW Signal post! If you know of an essay, video, article, podcast, or news story you think we should know about, send us a link. We are looking for content in all languages! Submitting a link doesn’t guarantee that it will be included in an OTW post, and inclusion of a link doesn’t mean that it is endorsed by the OTW.

tjs_whatnot: (Default)
tjs_whatnot ([personal profile] tjs_whatnot) wrote2025-12-28 11:20 am

Who's Ready?!


Snowflake Challenge: A warmly light quaint street of shops at night with heavy snow falling.
It's going to be AWESOME!
oursin: Frontispiece from C17th household manual (Accomplisht Lady)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2025-12-28 06:47 pm

Culinary

Last week's bread held out adequately.

On Wednesday I made Angel Biscuit dough (this year I had active dried yeast) which was enough to provide for Christmas, Boxing Day and Saturday morning breakfast. Turned out rather well.

For Christmas dinner we had: starter of steamed asparagus with halved hardboiled quails' eggs and salmon caviar; followed by pheasant pot-roasted with bacon, brandy, and madeira and served with Ruby Gem potatoes roasted in goosefat, garlic-roasted tenderstem broccoli (as noted with previous recent tenderstem broccoli, wish to invoke Trades Description Act re actual tenderness of stem), and red cabbage (bought-in, as not only is it an Almighty Faff, making it from scratch would involve ending up with A Hell of A Lot of Red Cabbage). Then bought-in Christmas puds with brandy butter and clotted cream.

Boxing Day lunch: blinis with smoked salmon, smoked Loch trout, and the remaining salmon caviar, and creme fraiche with horseradish cream, and a salad of lamb's lettuce and grilled piccarello pepper strips, in a walnut oil and damson vinegar dressing. Followed by mince pies.

Yesterday lunch was the leftover blinis and smoked fish. For yesterday evening meal I made the remains of the pheasant into a pilaff, served with a green salad.

Today's lunch: chestnut mushrooms quartered in olive oil, white-braised green beans and cut up piccarello peppers, the Phul-Gobi (braised cauliflower) from Dharamjit Singh's Indian Cookery, and blinis made up from the last of the batter, a bit past its best.

lina_trinch: (pocahontas)
𝔦𝔱'𝔰-𝔞 𝔪𝔢 🌠 ([personal profile] lina_trinch) wrote in [community profile] killthecake2025-12-28 12:45 pm
elayna: (Liam and his hands)
elayna ([personal profile] elayna) wrote2025-12-28 10:01 am

Fannish Fifty #48: fave surprising Christmas comedy bit

I love Liam Neeson and one thing I really admire is his ability to reinvent himself. From sudden action star in his 60s, to sudden comedy star in his 70s, omg. The Naked Gun was fun! The man is not afraid to take risks and try new things.

https://www.facebook.com/colbertlateshow/videos/watch-out-santa-liam-neeson-will-find-you-/1879035082753649/

On a related note, I watched David Harbour in Violent Night and rewatched Chris Evans in Red One this year. Neither were flawless, Violent Night was in particular a little ugh in some of its graphicness, but I do find imagining Santa and his world and how they would work or 'hand wave Christmas magic!' just not be explained is intriguing. Part of me is: write a Christmas fic! and part of me is: you'll only think about it around Christmas and then you'll be too busy, let the ideas float around and drift off.

Anyway, Liam fans, enjoy!
badly_knitted: (Rose)
badly_knitted ([personal profile] badly_knitted) wrote in [community profile] fan_flashworks2025-12-28 06:07 pm

Waiting Challenge: The Fantastic Journey: Fanfic: Unexpected Rescue


Title: Unexpected Rescue
Fandom: The Fantastic Journey
Author: [personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: Fred, Ben, Varian.
Rating: PG
Spoilers/Setting: Vortex.
Summary: Camden has had Fred and Ben locked in the cell behind his treasure room. There’s no way for them to escape, until a stranger shows up to rescue them.
Word Count: 850
Content Notes: Nada.
Written For: Challenge 501: Amnesty 83, using Challenge 346: Waiting.
Disclaimer: I don’t own The Fantastic Journey, or the characters. They belong to their creators.




narnialover7: Buffalo Bills Football (Spencer Brown - Hunky Blue)
narnialover7 ([personal profile] narnialover7) wrote in [community profile] iconthat2025-12-28 11:38 am

Pass It On 6

pass-it-on3
https://i.postimg.cc/905vr1w0/pass-it-on3.png

Spencer Brown(Buffalo Bills)

Next Picture:
602920279-1409642400522107-6266926800253871243-n
disneydream06: (Disney Angry)
disneydream06 ([personal profile] disneydream06) wrote2025-12-28 10:11 am
magicrubbish: Smile 2 (Smile 2)
Rainlover ([personal profile] magicrubbish) wrote in [community profile] iconthat2025-12-28 08:24 pm

Pass It On 6

 Dkzq14xy o




URL

Next image -
The Heart Killers ( 2025 )
Ykpxgedm o

thisbluespirit: (joy)
thisbluespirit ([personal profile] thisbluespirit) wrote2025-12-28 02:33 pm

Yuletide

I've been having a lovely [community profile] yuletide, in the right sort of place to do reading through it, if not much else! So much so, there should be a recs post to follow soon. But first of all, of course, my lovely gift!

It was for Enigma, which I was excited enough about just for that, but it is also excellent - a really well-done layered look at Tom & Hester running into Wigram a few years post-canon. Plus, my recip turned up to leave a comment on my assignment, so Yuletide 2025 is a win! \o/ (Even more so, as that other Enigma ficlet I mentioned? The author replied to my comment to say that they'd watched the film because of my promo post, so double yay and bonus outside-of-Yule ficlets!)

After the End (1472 words) by Anonymous
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Enigma (2001)
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Tom Jericho, Hester Wallace, Wigram (Enigma 2001)
Additional Tags: Post-Canon
Summary: Summer 1949. An encounter in a Parisian park.
Deeplinks ([syndicated profile] eff_feed) wrote2025-12-28 10:57 pm

EFFector Audio Speaks Up for Our Rights: 2025 Year in Review

Posted by Hudson Hongo

This year, you may have heard EFF sounding off about our civil liberties on NPR, BBC Radio, or any number of podcasts. But we also started sharing our voices directly with listeners in 2025. In June, we revamped EFFector, our long-running electronic newsletter, and launched a new audio edition to accompany it.

Providing a recap of the week's most important digital rights news, EFFector's audio companion features exclusive interviews where EFF's lawyers, activists, and technologists can dig deeper into the biggest stories in privacy, free speech, and innovation. Here are just some of the best interviews from EFFector Audio in 2025.

Unpacking a Social Media Spying Scheme

Earlier this year, the Trump administration launched a sprawling surveillance program to spy on the social media activity of millions of noncitizens—and punish those who express views it doesn't like. This fall, EFF's Lisa Femia came onto EFFector Audio to explain how this scheme works, its impact on free speech, and, importantly, why EFF is suing to stop it.

"We think all of this is coming together as a way to chill people's speech and make it so they do not feel comfortable expressing core political viewpoints protected by the First Amendment," Femia said.


Challenging the Mass Surveillance of Drivers

But Lisa was hardly the only guest talking about surveillance. In November, EFF's Andrew Crocker spoke to EFFector about Automated License Plate Readers (ALPRs), a particularly invasive and widespread form of surveillance. ALPR camera networks take pictures of every passing vehicle and upload the location information of millions of drivers into central databases. Police can then search these databases—typically without any judicial approval—to instantly reconstruct driver movements over weeks, months, or even years at a time.

"It really is going to be a very detailed picture of your habits over the course of a long period of time," said Crocker, explaining how ALPR location data can reveal where you work, worship, and many other intimate details about your life. Crocker also talked about a new lawsuit, filed by two nonprofits represented by EFF and the ACLU of Northern California, challenging the city of San Jose's use of ALPR searches without a warrant.

Similarly, EFF's Mario Trujillo joined EFFector in early November to discuss the legal issues and mass surveillance risks around face recognition in consumer devices.

Simple Tips to Take Control of Your Privacy

Online privacy isn’t dead. But tech giants have tried to make protecting it as annoying as possible. To help users take back control, we celebrated Opt Out October, sharing daily privacy tips all month long on our blog. In addition to laying down some privacy basics, EFF's Thorin Klosowski talked to EFFector about how small steps to protect your data can build up into big differences.

"This is a way to kind of break it down into small tasks that you can do every day and accomplish a lot," said Klosowski. "By the end of it, you will have taken back a considerable amount of your privacy."

User privacy was the focus of a number of EFFector interviews. In July, EFF's Lena Cohen spoke about what lawmakers, tech companies, and individuals can do to fight online tracking. That same month, Matthew Guariglia talked about precautions consumers can take before bringing surveillance devices like smart doorbells into their homes.

Digging Into the Next Wave of Internet Censorship

One of the most troubling trends of 2025 was the proliferation of age verification laws, which require online services to check, estimate, or verify users’ ages. Though these mandates claim to protect children, they ultimately create harmful censorship and surveillance regimes that put everyone—adults and young people alike—at risk.

This summer, EFF's Rin Alajaji came onto EFFector Audio to explain how these laws work and why we need to speak out against them.

"Every person listening here can push back against these laws that expand censorship," she said. "We like to say that if you care about internet freedom, this fight is yours."

This was just one of several interviews about free speech online. This year, EFFector also hosted Paige Collings to talk about the chaotic rollout of the UK's Online Safety Act and Lisa Femia (again!) to discuss the abortion censorship crisis on social media.

You can hear all these episodes and future installments of EFFector's audio companion on YouTube or the Internet Archive. Or check out our revamped EFFector newsletter by subscribing at eff.org/effector!

This article is part of our Year in Review series. Read other articles about the fight for digital rights in 2025.

Deeplinks ([syndicated profile] eff_feed) wrote2025-12-28 07:22 pm

Procurement Power—When Cities Realized They Can Just Say No: 2025 in Review

Posted by Sarah Hamid

In 2025, elected officials across the country began treating surveillance technology purchases differently: not as inevitable administrative procurements handled by police departments, but as political decisions subject to council oversight and constituent pressure. This shift proved to be the most effective anti-surveillance strategy of the year.

Since February, at least 23 jurisdictions fully ended, cancelled, or rejected Flock Safety ALPR programs (including Austin, Oak Park, Evanston, Hays County, San Marcos, Eugene, Springfield, and Denver) by recognizing surveillance procurement as political power, not administrative routine.

Legacy Practices & Obfuscation

For decades, cities have been caught in what researchers call "legacy procurement practices": administrative norms that prioritize "efficiency" and "cost thresholds" over democratic review. 

Vendors exploit this inertia through the "pilot loophole." As Taraaz and the Collaborative Research Center for Resilience (CRCR) note in a recent report, "no-cost offers" and free trials allow police departments to bypass formal procurement channels entirely. By the time the bill comes due, the surveillance is already normalised in the community, turning a purchase decision into a "continuation of service" that is politically difficult to stop.

This bureaucracy obscures the power that surveillance vendors have over municipal procurement decisions. As Arti Walker-Peddakotla details, this is a deliberate strategy. Walker-Peddakotla details how vendors secure "acquiescence" by hiding the political nature of surveillance behind administrative veils: framing tools as "force multipliers" and burying contracts in consent agendas. For local electeds, the pressure to "outsource" government decision-making makes vendor marketing compelling. Vendors use "cooperative purchasing" agreements to bypass competitive bidding, effectively privatizing the policy-making process. 

The result is a dangerous "information asymmetry" where cities become dependent on vendors for critical data governance decisions. The 2025 cancellations finally broke that dynamic.

The Procurement Moment

This year, cities stopped accepting this "administrative" frame. The shift came from three converging forces: audit findings that exposed Flock's lack of safeguards, growing community organizing pressure, and elected officials finally recognizing that saying "no" to a renewal was not just an option—it was the responsible choice.

When Austin let its Flock pilot expire on July 1, the decision reflected a political judgment: constituents rejected a nationwide network used for immigration enforcement. It wasn't a debate about retention rates; it was a refusal to renew.

These cancellations were also acts of fiscal stewardship. By demanding evidence of efficacy (and receiving none) officials in Hays County, Texas and San Marcos, Texas rejected the "force multiplier" myth. They treated the refusal of unproven technology not just as activism, but as a basic fiduciary duty. In Oak Park, Illinois, trustees cancelled eight cameras after an audit found Flock lacked safeguards, while Evanston terminated its 19-camera network shortly after. Eugene and Springfield, Oregon terminated 82 combined cameras in December. City electeds have also realized that every renewal is a vote for "vendor lock-in." As EPIC warns, once proprietary systems are entrenched, cities lose ownership of their own public safety data, making it nearly impossible to switch providers or enforce transparency later.

The shift was not universal. Denver illustrated the tension when Mayor Mike Johnston overrode a unanimous council rejection to extend Flock's contract. Council Member Sarah Parady rightly identified this as "mass surveillance" imposed "with no public process." This is exactly why procurement must be reclaimed: when treated as technical, surveillance vendors control the conversation; when recognized as political, constituents gain leverage.

Cities Hold the Line Against Mass Surveillance

EFF has spent years documenting how procurement functions as a lever for surveillance expansion, from our work documenting Flock Safety's troubling data-sharing practices with ICE and federal law enforcement to our broader advocacy on surveillance technology procurement reform. The 2025 victories show that when cities understand procurement as political rather than technical, they can say no. Procurement power can be the most direct route to stopping mass surveillance. 

As cities move into 2026, the lesson is clear: surveillance is a choice, not a mandate, and your community has the power to refuse it. The question isn't whether technology can police more effectively; it's whether your community wants to be policed this way. That decision belongs to constituents, not vendors.

This article is part of our Year in Review series. Read other articles about the fight for digital rights in 2025.

Deeplinks ([syndicated profile] eff_feed) wrote2025-12-28 05:24 pm

Defending Encryption in the U.S. and Abroad: 2025 in Review

Posted by Thorin Klosowski

Defending encryption has long been a bedrock of our work. Without encryption, it's impossible to have private conversations or private data storage. This year, we’ve seen attacks on these rights from all around the world. 

Europe Goes All in On Breaking Encryption, Mostly Fails (For Now)

The European Union Council has repeatedly tried to pass a controversial message scanning proposal, known as “Chat Control,” that would require secure messaging providers to scan the contents of messages. Every time this has come up since it was first introduced in 2022, it got batted downbecause no matter how you slice it, client-side scanning breaks end-to-end encryption. The Danish presidency seemed poised to succeed in passing Chat Control this year, but strong pushback from across the EU caused them to reconsider and rework their stance. In its current state, Chat Control isn’t perfect, but it at least includes strong language to protect encryption, which is good news for users. 

Meanwhile, France tried to pass its own encryption-breaking legislation. Unlike Chat Control, which pushed for client-side scanning, France took a different approach: allowing so-called “ghost participants,” where law enforcement could silently join encrypted chats. Thankfully, the French National Assembly did the right thing and rejected this dangerous proposal

It wasn’t all wins, though.

Perhaps the most concerning encryption issue is still ongoing in the United Kingdom, where the British government reportedly ordered Apple to backdoor its optional end-to-end encryption in iCloud. In response, Apple disabled one of its strongest security features, Advanced Data Protection, for U.K. users. After some back and forth with the U.S., the U.K. allegedly rewrote the demand, to clarify it was limited to only apply to British users. That doesn’t make it any better. Tribunal hearings are planned for 2026, and we’ll continue to monitor developments.

Speaking of developments to keep an eye on, the European Commission released its “Technology Roadmap on Encryption” which discusses new ways for law enforcement to access encrypted data. There’s a lot that could happen with this roadmap, but let’s be clear, here: EU officials should scrap any roadmap focused on encryption circumvention and instead invest in stronger, more widespread use of end-to-end encryption. 

U.S. Attempts Fall Flat

The U.S. had its share of battles, too. The Senate re-introduced the STOP CSAM Act, which threatened to compromise encryption by requiring encrypted communication providers to have knowledge about what sorts of content their services are being used to send. The bill allows encrypted services to raise a legal defense—but only after they’ve been sued. That's not good enough. STOP CSAM would force encryption providers to defend against costly lawsuits over content they can't see or control. And a jury could still consider the use of encryption to be evidence of wrongdoing. 

In Florida, a bill ostensibly about minors' social media use also just so happened to demand a backdoor into encryption services—already an incredible overreach. It went further, attempting to ban disappearing messages and grant parents unrestricted access to their kids’ messages as well. Thankfully, the Florida Legislature ended without passing it.

It is unlikely these sorts of attempts to undermine encryption will suddenly stop. But whatever comes next, EFF will continue to stand up for everyone's right to use encryption to have secure and private online communications. 

This article is part of our Year in Review series. Read other articles about the fight for digital rights in 2025.

innitmarvelous_og: (Default)
Amy Innitmarvelous ([personal profile] innitmarvelous_og) wrote in [community profile] iconthat2025-12-28 09:12 am

Pass It On 6



LINK: https://i.imgur.com/y492nbl.jpg

Next: The Avengers (2012)
Tony&ThorAV1-1
malinaldarose: (dobby)
malinaldarose ([personal profile] malinaldarose) wrote2025-12-28 08:55 am

Four Calling Birds

It is 28° this morning. It's supposed to get up to 47° and rain later. The forecast says the temperature will continue to rise overnight, then fall sharply tomorrow, and there is a red winter storm warning band on the long range forecast for the rest of the week. Oh, joy. Good thing I really don't have to go anywhere, excepting tomorrow, when I have a bunch of errands to run.

I ended up not going anywhere yesterday, either, not even to my recycling bin or my mailbox, because when I went outside to do the former, the pellety ice had solidified overnight and was just thick ice. I decided I didn't need to put those collapsed boxes into the recyling bin that badly, and I more or less forgot that I needed to go get the mail. It's fine. There's probably only some credit card advertisements and maybe a catalog in there, anyway. The check I have been expecting arrived the day before, so it's sitting on my desk now.

I started the Grand Work yesterday with the back room. I collapsed all the boxes that I had been saving, except for the one that actually fit the giant dog toy that I bought for MyNuncle (because it was a capybara (and, yes, there's a story behind that)). They made it as far as the breezeway (see above, re: ice). I put away, or at least moved, all of my Christmas gifts that had just been stacked on the table. I packed the capybara for shipping. I gathered up a bunch of stuff that I had ordered from Kohl's and been iffy about keeping (including a full-size wreath, and all the Halloween dishes I ordered) and got it ready to go back to the store (tomorrow), after the ice melts but before the next snowstorm starts.

I basically got the room down to its baseline level of clutter -- which means there's still cleaning to do out there, but there was progress.

A few things got ticked off my do-list for yesterday. While listening to Wait Wait Don't Tell Me, I drew the February pages in my desk calendar. I signed up for a budgeting workshop next month hosted by CSEA. I finally put together the vacuum I ordered on Black Friday and which has been sitting in the laundry room for a month. It was very simple, too -- all the pieces just clicked together, so I didn't even need any tools. I ran it in the kitchen; the beater bar seems to propel it on carpet, then that can be switched off for uncarpeted floors. It's heavier than the Hoover that it's replacing, though, and I'm not certain I like it. I don't think I want to try lugging it upstairs.

I wouldn't be replacing the Hoover at all if I could get the damn thing open so I could get at the filters to clean them. I didn't have this trouble with the last one. It simply requires more hand strength than I have.

There was no napping yesterday. I tried to call MyAuntie and Nuncle, but they were out, so I got my book and retired to the couch and read for the rest of the day. I finished Sorceress of Darshiva and have only Seeress of Kell (which I did not start last night) to go. I don't think I'll read The Rivan Codex, which is basically the story of how Polgara takes care of Garion's ancestors through the centuries (if I recall correctly, anyway; I have only read it once). After ten straight books of Eddings, it's time to move on to something else.

I went to bed around the normal time. I was able to reach Parker, so I kicked him out of the bedroom...and that was probably a mistake, because about an hour and a half later, he woke me up by scratching at the bedroom door to be let in. So I got up, used the bathroom, and went back to bed...and fifteen minutes later, he was scratching at the door again, so I got my little misting spray bottle from my craft room and spritzed him with it. He ran off, but fifteen minutes later he was back. So I spritzed him again. Again, he ran off and came back. After the third time, I was wide awake, so I ended up getting up and playing games on my computer until 1:00 a.m. And did Parker come to sit with me to get the attention he was apparently craving? No, he did not. He disappeared completely, the fuzzy little bastard. But at least when I finally went back to bed, he left me alone. Unsurprisingly, it was 7:00 a.m. when I finally woke up again -- two hours later than usual.

Today...I haven't quite decided what I'll tackle. I should probably just keep working in the back room until it is finished. I'll need to put yesterday's laundry away and maybe do another load -- I have accumulated enough rags now to do a rag load (which will include my sandals, because they were waiting for a load to go into). I need to sit down with my calendar and plot out do-lists for the rest of the week. Oh, I have to clean the kitty fountain today; it's Other Sunday. (It gets taken apart and scrubbed every other Sunday.)

The temperature is supposed to rise slowly today, by the looks of the hourly forecast, so it'll be a while before the ice starts melting, so I probably won't be going anywhere until this afternoon, if I go anywhere at all. Though I do need a couple of things from the grocery store. On the other hand, they could wait until I am running errands tomorrow....

According to their FB page, the new bookstore is going to start running three book clubs: a romance one (ugh), a general one (different topic every month), and a silent one. I may try the latter two. What I would really like is to have a language club where people could practice languages or even start learning new ones. I wonder if the library would be amenable to hosting something like that? I'm pretty sure there isn't already something like that and I'm not sure I'd want to have to organize it. I may check with them tomorrow, though.

I really don't want to spend my vacation cleaning. Have I mentioned that I really don't want to spend my vacation cleaning? But this is what happens when I don't spend my evenings and weekends cleaning....
glinda: local honestly (not a tourist)
glinda ([personal profile] glinda) wrote2025-12-28 01:04 pm
Entry tags:

One Wonderous Sunset, One Final Blaze of Glory

It's the end of the year, and I’ve got time for one last album for this challenge.

In a year when it felt like everyone in my age bracket was obsessed with Oasis going back on tour, the equivalent band for me, Pulp, released a new album and went out on tour. (I was 11 going on 12 when I first heard Disco 2000, it was on a funny shaped sample CD that my dad got as a freebie somewhere, he brought it home, handed it to me and said ‘you’re going to love that one’ and I was hugely annoyed he was right. Different Class was the album that defined my teen years - it rewired something in my brain.) I’m mostly glad I didn’t try and get tickets after all, the surprisingly large number of clips of their Glasgow gig, were up in the gods of the Hydro which is realistically where I’d have ended up and overall if I couldn’t have been down on the floor, I was just as well just watching their ‘surprise’ Glastonbury gig. (It was the 30th anniversary of their classic Glasto performance when they were at the height of their fame.) I really loved both the singles they released from it - I was doing a lot of driving for work, and despite how much 6Music over played them both, I never got sick of either track - and the new bits I heard on the Glasto set so I fully intended to pick up a copy of the album - More. I just never got round to it, until the end of November when I was looking for a pick me up in HMV and spotted a ‘colour’ vinyl edition in the twofer deal - I got Air’s Moon Safari an album I’ve loved for years, but only ever had it ripped from an friend’s copy - and knew that was exactly what I needed.

(And because Pulp absolutely know their audience, particularly for the vinyl edition, there's an insert with both production details and all the lyrics - seriously bands underestimate how much added value having the lyrics provides. Also I got the 'green' vinyl addition and it's just a gorgeous shade of bottle green which makes a gorgeous contrast with the orange on the central label. Just nice simple design. When Jarvis and Candida from the band were interviewed by Jo Whiley after the Glastonbury gig, Candida noted that when they’d all got together to rehearse they’d felt excited to make music together again for the first time in ages and I think you can tell, it really feels like an album made by a band enjoying making music together. I mean they’ve been a band together for longer than my entire life, when they released their breakout album His and Hers in 1994 they’d been going for like 16 years! It’s nice to think they just get back together every so often because it’s still fun to make music together.)

It was a great choice. Got to Have Love and Spike Island are still clearly the stand out tracks - classic Pulp tracks - but listening to it on vinyl, just letting it play while I was doing other things was a great way to let the rest of the album soak into my brain. Tracks I’d probably have skipped over in digital format, or even just on CD for being a bit blah, have settled into my brain and become favourites. It’s such a middle-aged album and I love it, just listening to Jarvis’ wry dead-pan commentary on life and love, that mixture of cynicism and hopefulness that is their trademark, is soothing to me. The stripped back beauty of some tracks versus the lush production of tracks like The Hymn of the North an album that reminds me why I still love this band so much. I was going to pick out my favourite tracks to talk about - Grown ups and Background Noise - but the more I listen to the album the more I fall in love with it all the tracks. It’s not often that one of your favourite bands from your teens gets back together and makes one of their best albums - I’ve been lucky Skunk Anansie came back with a banger in the form of Black Traffic but that was 2013, I think, it doesn’t happen a lot - and I’m so glad they did.