Proud of its wounds.

Friday, 10 July 2026 22:31
hannah: (Laundry jam - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
I decided on For What Binds Us. At least, as my first request. I can afford another later this month if I'm careful. I still hold that poetry readings are one of the best things to use Cameo for, and I always hope I'm not being avant-garde when I commission these readings and there's other people doing it I simply don't yet know about.

In other news, my younger brother's wife G. recently received some news she didn't want widely circulated, but she told her brother, who told his wife, who told her mother, who told my brother. He was already aware of the news, what with being married to G., and it still got back to him. It's good news that she wanted private, which has me abjectly baffled she told anyone who'd go around sharing it. For contrast, after my mother found out she then told me G. had received some news and I could ask her about it if I wanted, which at least acknowledges a boundary.

Friday, 10 July 2026 19:22
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
Did some photowalking today. I will make a proper photography post later. But, I want to talk about something I deal with on some of those shoots, and wow, today it was intense. Anyway trigger warning - talk of suicide prevention programs and projects - under the cut. Read more... )

Erin Watches: Avatar season 2

Friday, 10 July 2026 22:01
erinptah: Madoka and Homura (madoka)
[personal profile] erinptah

Watched season 2 of the new A:tLA live-action remake. It’s good!

I also rewatched s2 of the cartoon…and, well, the more I think about it, the more I like the remake better.

The original series has the Gaang traveling across the Earth Kingdom for the first two-thirds of the season, getting into shenanigans with various towns and tribes they meet along the way. They meet a group of refugees, escort them to Ba Sing Se, and stay in the city for the last third.

The remake starts with the Gaang already escorting refugees from Omashu. The first episode is mostly traveling, with the Serpent’s Pass as the big set piece; the second episode has them meet Toph; they get to Ba Sing Se by episode 3, and the rest of the plot happens there.

Cartoon Toph next to live-action Toph

 


How To Check Out Before Checking In

Saturday, 11 July 2026 01:00
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read How To Check Out Before Checking In

Guest: *Walking in.* "I'd like to book a room, please. A nice one with a view."
Me: "Yes, we have some available. First I'd need to know how long you're planning on staying."
Guest: "Depends, how long is it until squatter's rights kick in?"

Read How To Check Out Before Checking In

Permaculture

Friday, 10 July 2026 20:15
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] gardening
Recently I attended a permaculture club meeting at Douglas-Hart Nature Center.

Read more... )

Friday, 10 July 2026 20:44
flemmings: (Default)
[personal profile] flemmings
For the second time this year I knocked my waterpik off the sink onto the floor and broke it, and for the second time the broken piece disappeared into a black hole so I couldn't see if it was fixable so for the second time I went up to Loblaws and bought a new one for close to $100. That thing now stays in the corner and if I'm cleaning it goes on the hall table.

Two young raccoons were climbing my cherry tree the other evening and, I assume, nibbling on the desiccated fruit that remains. Fine: means I can start using the washline again. Not that I care to have raccoons and their toxic poo in my garden but I suppose it's better than the coyotes that have the neighbouring FBs in a tizzy.  At least one pair has been denning beside an empty house and the frequent sightings have some people losing their minds, because the adults keep warning dogwalkers, and more to the point their tiny dogs, away, sometimes  viciously.  The most anti-coyote voice ('Remove them! Put them in an enclosure!') is the woman who was delighted when KFC closed because she was so concerned about people eating unhealthy food. People keep telling her to be quiet but of course she won't be.

Walking up the street this evening I counted three doggie bags left on the sidewalk at various points, something of a record. They're from irresponsible dog walkers who dropped them in other people's green bins after the garbage guys came through, and the owners of the green bins removed them when they came home because who wants someone else's dog poo in your bin in this weather? Being scratchy myself from allergies and humidity (am certain there's mould in my basement coming up the vents) I might wish coyotes on the dogs of said walkers, but it's not the dogs' fault that people are, well, shit.

2646 / Fic - ER

Friday, 10 July 2026 20:29
siria: (er - carter baby)
[personal profile] siria
Eat Your Heart Out
ER | Carter, Weaver Gen | ~1200 words | Episode tag for 7.05. Thanks to [personal profile] sheafrotherdon for audiencing.

(Also on AO3)

Carter, Kerry, and the aftermath of the day. )

Roads

Friday, 10 July 2026 20:30
jss: (sixties)
[personal profile] jss
My homeowners' association is responsible for a couple of streets in our community, including the street I live on. This is relevant because generally they have a 20-year lifespan and ours was 21 and in poor shape. The board decided back in 2022–2023 or so that we needed to get it replaced and said "Probably $10,000 in special assessments."

This... did not go over well at all.

After much sturm und drang across multiple years' annual meetings and dedicated Q&A sessions, they managed to get the cost down closer to $6,000 (so far it's apparently been $1,250 in both December 2023 and May 2024, then $2,000 more in October 2025, with the final amount due this summer yet to be determined, depending on the state of the underlying road bed). The core samples they took all implied the bed was still good, but they wouldn't know for sure until they ripped up the existing 4" of asphalt.

Back in mid-June they ripped out about 40% of our curbs for replacement. Eventually they filled the 3–4" gaps (but only at the driveways) with loose infill between the curbs and the roads so we could use our driveways again. Then the weather got rainy so the road replacement got bumped into July. This past Monday they ripped out all of the asphalt (so my car's been parked on the cross street since Sunday night), and yesterday they were supposed to lay down all the new pavement but only managed the under-layer. Today they finished the paving. Saturday (tomorrow) they plan to pain the visitor parking area lines, stop lines, and crosswalks, so access may be temporarily limited.

To their credit, they've been very communicative and informative throughout the process. They send daily emails whenever stuff is happening, letting us know what they accomplished and what affects which block of which street when, including regular reminders that a lot is weather-dependent.

I'm really happy they finished such that when I get back from Detroit tomorrow night (or very early Sunday morning) I'll be able to park in my garage again. I probably won't move the car until tomorrow though to reduce the amount of goo I'll get on my tires (and driveway and garage floor).

Photos are on my Bluesky.

Challenge 521: Praise

Friday, 10 July 2026 17:08
teaotter: a blonde woman sings into an old-fashioned microphone on a dark stage (Bombshell)
[personal profile] teaotter posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Our new challenge is:

PRAISE



As always, you can interpret the prompt literally or figuratively, in whatever way works for you.

Each work created for this challenge should be posted as a new entry to the comm. Posting starts now and continues up until the challenge ends at 4pm Pacific Time on Monday, July 20th. No sign-up required.

Mods will tag your work for fandom. When you've posted entries to three consecutive challenges, you will earn a name tag, and we'll go back and tag all your previous entries with your name, as well.

All kinds of fanworks in all fandoms are welcome. Please have a look at our guidelines before you play. If you have any questions or concerns, don't hesitate to contact a mod. And if you have any suggestions for future challenges, you can leave them in the comments of this post.

You can view stats for [community profile] fan_flashworks entries and search and filter them via the Community Report and Creator Report. See our FAQ post for more details.

Also, keep an eye out for the next [community profile] ffw_social post, which will go up in the next couple of days. If you haven't joined the [community profile] ffw_social comm, it's never too late to come and check it out. (Posts are locked, which means you have to join to see them.)

Daily Check In.

Friday, 10 July 2026 18:52
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 #34816 Daily poll
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 8

How are you doing?

I am okay
5 (62.5%)

I am not okay, but don't need help right now
3 (37.5%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans are you living with?

I am living single
3 (37.5%)

One other person
3 (37.5%)

More than one other person
2 (25.0%)




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.

Lake Lewisia #1420

Friday, 10 July 2026 16:51
scrubjayspeaks: Town sign for (fictional) Lake Lewisia, showing icons of mountains and a lake with the letter L (Lake Lewisia)
[personal profile] scrubjayspeaks
There was a long-established tradition of dressing in ceremonial garb, modeled after a deity of choice, and using song, and dance, and other, more pharmaceutical enticements to summon that deity to possess their mortal vessel. As it turned out, the method worked quite well for any extraplanar entity, divine or otherwise, including fictional creatures from the collective dreaming, of which the modern world offered a particularly broad selection. The cosplayers were informed by their non-costumed friends that they had a really excellent time at the convention, though they had no memories of their own to confirm it--just several coveted awards for Best Canon Reenactment.

---

LL#1420

No Room for Interpretation

Friday, 10 July 2026 23:00
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read No Room for Interpretation

Without fail, every single time I would have multiple people come in and ask if we had any rooms available. Then, when I told them we were unfortunately fully booked, they would complain about having to walk all the way inside, because calling or just reading the signs would be too much to ask, right?

Read No Room for Interpretation

Croatia part 4: Split

Friday, 10 July 2026 17:50
ilanarama: profile of me backpacking.  Woo. (hiking)
[personal profile] ilanarama
Did you think I'd abandoned this narrative? (Valid, if so...it's been a while) But no! Let us pick up again in Split...

As mentioned in my previous post, our final stop was supposed to be Split, but because of construction there, Romantica took us to Trogir instead, which was awesome so I'm glad it worked out that way! After our final night on the boat, we got on a bus to Split along with everyone else who was traveling further in Croatia, which was most of the group; I think only a half-dozen people took the bus directly to the airport.

Split is the second-largest city in Croatia (behind the capital, Zagreb) and the largest city we visited. Definitely a change of pace! Though while it has a lot of urbanization, it also has a very large park, which covers a long peninsula at the end of the city; we spent an afternoon there and hiked around on the mostly-paved trails, which gave us a nice vantage point for some photos:

Split harbor from Marjan park Split from Marjan Park

Read more... )

Salad day

Friday, 10 July 2026 19:27
magid: (Default)
[personal profile] magid
Today's food prep had multiple salads, plus a some applying heat to food:
  • massaged kale* with lemon-tahini dressing and sunflower seeds (kale* stems chopped and added to the big jar of fridge pickles)
  • cabbage* and carrot* slaw
  • green salad with salanova*, roasted summer squash*, cucumber, sunflower seeds, and feta, dressed with oil and vinegar
  • dilly* cucumber* salad
  • dilly* potato salad with hard-boiled eggs, parsley*, and chives*
  • roasted summer squash*, fennel*, and onion, then topped with silverbrite salmon fillets themselves topped with peach hot* sauce and panko and baked
  • roasted beets* (for later green salad)
  • zucchini* kugel

* locally grown

Saturday @ 9:07 am

Saturday, 11 July 2026 09:07
alisx: Sketch of a slightly different-looking edgy-looking smiley face. (Default)
[personal profile] alisx
Kangaroo standing in some tall grasses between a lake and a paved path.

Walked past this poor little guy, right outside the gallery (so i.e. a pretty busy walking path). Suspect he’d fallen in the lake or gotten separated from his mob in some other fashion, and was just sitting in the bushes shivering while people took photos (and also called the wildlife people to come help him).


But to anyone who’s like "do kangaroos just jump down the street in Australia?" generally no, but here specifically, yes (they are a menace).

Leave a comment.+

Agriculture

Friday, 10 July 2026 17:55
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Ugandan Coffee Growers Shrug Off Drought Thanks to Regenerative Agriculture

Among the rolling hills of Uganda’s Masaka region, robusta coffee plants are producing larger, tastier yields thanks to a pilot program utilizing regenerative agriculture to battle droughts or erratic rainfall.

A catch-all term for a variety of growing techniques as simple as mulching to as complex as cover cropping, regenerative agriculture is especially useful in the coffee belts where nutrient-poor tropical soils and heavy rainfall make erosion a real threat to productive crops
.


Of course regenerative farming works. Nature knows how to compensate for common problems. Humans just need to quick fucking up those processes.

Read more... )
oldestcharm: (sebastian)
[personal profile] oldestcharm posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: Eavesdropping
Fandom: Bartimaeus & Hogwarts Legacy
Rating: G
Length: 666 words
Content notes: 
Author notes: Last minute upload if I can make it!!
Summary: Matilda Weasley overhears yet another suspicious conversation between two of her brightest students.

Eavesdropping )

some things!

Friday, 10 July 2026 23:59
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

Today in Social Anxiety: I approached a human and asked about filming myself in the gym, got the go ahead, proceeded to do so for deadlifts, spotted three things wrong myself, shared a video with some folk for a form check, and got some useful pointers and MANY contradictory opinions on what, exactly, my butt should be doing.

There were diagrams.

Also today I had the most comfortable experience lugging watering cans around of my life (not hanging off joints!!! it's a thing you can do when you have muscle!!! it turns out!!!), several plants are not dead, I didn't eat any more jostaberries but I really need to, and we had A Fantastic Time taking all the various sections of The Puzzle that we'd done and sliding them around the coffee table sadly. This was complicated by the fact that the coffee table is juuust wide enough for the thing to fit, with space at one end for the box to sit neatly once you're finished. Eventually we resorted to The Giant Puzzle-Doing Cardboard! There was Much Swearing, it is now sat happily on the table and I am grinning at it every time I look over, and yesterday she released another in the series.

Also: strawberries. That is all.

Book Review: Closer by Dennis Cooper

Friday, 10 July 2026 15:47
juushika: Photograph of a black cat named October, peering out of a white fleece cave (October)
[personal profile] juushika
Title: Closer (George Miles Cycle book 1)
Author: Dennis Cooper
Published: Grove Press, 2007 (1989)
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 130
Total Page Count: 571,730
Text Number: 2166
Read Because: reading the author; ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: An interconnected group of gay teens have sex and use drugs disconsolately. I'm glad this isn't the Dennis Cooper that I started with, because I don't know that it would have compelled me to read his work. There are parts I like, more in effort than result: the rotating perspectives give external views of characters and events, but it's undermined by how repetitive and often interchangeable even the characters are; the edgy tone and content is bog down by ennui which, yes, is exactly what I liked in My Loose Thread, but again the ensemble impedes, rendering this a cavalcade of minor horrors rather than peering deeper into any of them. It just grinds away. But I'll keep reading; the seeds of Cooper's fixations and voice are here, and they compel me.

Down to One a Day

Friday, 10 July 2026 17:20
yourlibrarian: SamSoScrewed-no_apologies_86 (SPN-SamSoScrewed-no_apologies_86)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian
1) Signal boosting Squidgeworld's call for feedback about how to handle guest comments on the site. "Commission spammers (at least this most recent one) have been copy & pasting entire stories into ChatGPT, and then having ChatGPT formulate a question about that fic. So while a guest comment may have sounded heart-felt, if the comment ended with a, "Why do you think..." or "What inspired you to..." question, then they didn't read your story and come up with a question; AI did. And the person literally copy & pasted a ChatGPT generated question into a comment - that's how we knew.

The easiest way to deal with these type of people is to disable guest comments completely."

2) Platforms sought no age proof for any of 50 test accounts declaring age 16, researchers said. "Some dummy accounts received advertisements for youth banking products, an indication the platform registered the person's age range, Hammond said. One account which signed up to Elon Musk's X claiming to be 16 was served pornographic content, he added. None of the platforms let users sign up if they declared they were under 16. But just one, Australia-based live-streaming platform Kick, refused to let users create an account without proof of age."

3) The decline in reading cuts across age groups, gender, and education levels. "From 1984 to 2025, the percentage of 13-year-olds who said they rarely or never read for fun rose from 8 to 29 percent. Every year older a child gets, the less they like to read. Robert Townsend, a program director at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, recently ran focus groups asking high-school students how they felt about reading for pleasure. He told me that most thought of it as an alien practice."

What I found most fascinating was this study's results: Read more... )

4) And it's not just text that video is displacing: End of an Era: Longtime Podcast Hosts Go Quiet as Video Dominates "Over the past year, various indicators of this transition have been piling up. Marc Maron ended his program after 16 years. Al Franken, an audio evangelist going back to the days of Air America in 2004, released his final episode last week, too. And many of the remaining audio-centric stars are attempting video in some fashion. (Witness Ira Glass, who is now recording promotional clips for This American Life.)"

5) France versus Morocco. Read more... )


Poll #34815 Kudos Footer-598
This poll is anonymous.
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 2

Want to leave a Kudos?

View Answers

Kudos!
2 (100.0%)



FAFO With FMLA

Friday, 10 July 2026 22:00
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read FAFO With FMLA

After she had the kid, she dropped in pretty regularly to show the kid off and gossip with some people.
Our store manager was really hung up on "You're coming back, yeah? You're coming back, right?"
And she very clearly and definitely stated, "Yes, I'm not going to stop working now that I'm a mom! I'll be back!"
And as soon as she'd leave, he'd sit there all "She's not going to come back, guys..."

Read FAFO With FMLA

Hashtag Hot

Friday, 10 July 2026 21:00
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Hashtag Hot

Customer: "The drinks on your menu listed under 'Hot', that means they're hot, right?"
Me: "Uh… yes."
Customer: "I mean, like hot as in "ouch that's hot", not "oh wow, they're so hot right now"."

Read Hashtag Hot

Recent reading

Friday, 10 July 2026 19:49
troisoiseaux: (reading 4)
[personal profile] troisoiseaux
Continued my short story kick with a new collection by Louise Erdrich, Python's Kiss; I particularly liked her unexpected* foray into sci-fi with a pair of stories set in a San Junipero-like digital afterlife, one about a woman plotting vengeance on her father (also dead, in the same afterlife) and the other about a woman whose version of heaven includes raising a construct of her daughter through (but not past) childhood, over and over, until the current version – the "8037th Caroline" – refuses to fade away and takes over her mother's (after)life instead. Two of the other stories I liked best also shared a thematic link, of women surviving abusive marriages: contemporary fiction played straight in "Wedding Dresses" – the titular dresses a story framework for a woman telling her niece about her four prior marriages – and with a magical-realism twist in "Borsalino," in which the main character's encounter with a ghostly thief in Venice decades before helps her leave her abusive husband. Snakes are another recurring theme. Cool black-and-white illustrations by Erdrich's daughter at the beginning of each story, frequently blurring line between drawing and comic strip.

* It came as a surprise to me, anyway— I'd forgotten about/haven't read her dystopian speculative fiction novel Future Home of the Living God.

Lemmings (1991)

Friday, 10 July 2026 16:50
pauraque: Guybrush writing in his journal adrift on the sea in a bumper car (monkey island adrift)
[personal profile] pauraque
This puzzle game by Scottish studio DMA Design takes as its inspiration the myth that lemmings (arctic rodents) mindlessly fling themselves off cliffs. In the game, lemmings (pixelly humanoids with green hair and blue leotards) fall from a trap door and begin marching mindlessly to the right, oblivious to cliffs, fire, lakes of acid, and other deadly hazards. When they hit a wall, they turn 180 and march the other way. It's your job to guide as many of them as possible safely to the exit.

lemmings fall from above and walk to the right, away from the exit that is immediately to the left. one has just exploded in a shower of pixels

To accomplish this, you can assign individual lemmings one of eight skills: Climber (climbs vertical walls), Floater (uses an umbrella to survive falls), Bomber (explodes after 5 seconds, leaving a crater), Blocker (stands in place and won't let other lemmings past), Builder (builds a staircase), Basher (digs a horizontal tunnel), Miner (digs a diagonal tunnel), and Digger (digs a vertical tunnel). Each level offers a limited number of skill assignments, so you have to use them strategically to create a path for the others.

Lemmings was wildly popular in the '90s, spawning multiple expansion packs, sequels, and spinoffs. As a child I don't know if I was really aware of what a global phenomenon it was, but it was certainly a phenomenon in my house, considering the countless hours my brother and I spent trying (and usually failing) to stop the cute little dummies from marching to their doom.

cut for length )

The original Lemmings is unfortunately not commercially available. If you've misplaced your floppies/cartridge, various releases are available as abandonware. I was playing the DOS release on DOSBox, which runs fine but you may need to edit some files to defeat the copy protection. If that doesn't sit well or sounds like too much trouble, there are also several fan-made freeware clones that are supposed to run on modern systems, though I have not personally vetted any of them.

Hum 110 Adjacent Children's Books

Friday, 10 July 2026 13:23
sanguinity: woodcut by M.C. Escher, "Snakes" (Default)
[personal profile] sanguinity
And while I'm wrapping up Hum 110 posting for the (academic) year, here are a bunch of topically-adjacent children's books we wandered into while reading the assigned curriculum. (To be clear, none of these were assigned: they're all things we found that are based on stuff we read in bookgroup, or drew upon art styles we studied, etc.)


Vivian Mansour (illus. Emmanuel Valtierra, trans. Carlos Rodriguez Cortez), Pilgrim Codex (2025)

Heroic account of a Mexican family who, driven from their homes by violence, cross the US-Mexico border to try to find a safer home. Re-imagined through the lens of Mesoamerican codices, the family's peril, sacrifices, and bravery are told with sympathy and pride. Alas, not everyone in the family makes it alive to the US, and some of the scenes are genuinely harrowing. Nevertheless, I'd still call this age-appropriate: given that some children have themselves survived similar events (or have classmates or playmates who did), this could be a useful text for helping children discuss and make sense of their world.


Duncan Tonatiuh, A Land of Books: Dreams of Young Mexihcah Word Painters (2022)

Story of young tlahcuiloqueh (scribes) in training, learning to paint amoxtin (books, aka codices). Illustrations draw heavily on Mesoamerican glyphs, and shows several example of completed codex-pages in progress. The more one knows about how to read Mesoamerican codices, the richer this book becomes. Glossary of Nahuatl in the back (used liberally in the text), but unfortunately does not include a guide to Mesoamerican glyphs, dating systems, or other conventions of the Mixteca writing system. I highly recommend pairing this with Gordon Whittaker's Deciphering Aztec Hieroglyphs (not a children's picture book) or similar, to get insight into everything Tonatiuh is doing here.


Duncan Tonatiuh, The Princess and the Warrior (2016)

Tonatiuh's version of the Mixteca origin story of the volcanoes Iztaccihuatl and Popocatepetl, which are visible from Tenochtitlan / Mexico City. As above, the illustrations are inspired by Mesoamerican codices, and the text is rich with Nahuatl vocabulary. As ever, I am caught by random side-characters: what became of the messenger who was bribed to betray Popoca? He lucked out that Popoca was too caught up in Itza's illness to hunt him down for revenge...


Duncan Tonatiuh, Feathered Serpent and the Five Suns (2020)

Another Mixteca origin story, this one for humanity itself. We read in bookgroup one of the sources Tonatiuh draws upon, but I didn't recognize the middle section of Tonatiuh's narrative--and the afterword suggests that the novel-to-me section was Tonatiuh's own creation, imaging that Quetzalcoatl faced the same challenges on the path to the underworld that the dead do.


Duncan Tonatiuh, Diego Rivera: His World and Ours (2011)

Introduction to the life and works of Diego Rivera, who was one of the principal artists of the Mexican government's muralism campaign of the 1920s and 30s. The art is a Mixtecan riff on Rivera's style, and alternates between Rivera's work, reimagined in Tonatiuh's style, and speculation about what archetypically Mexican subjects he might have immortalized had he been working today.



There may or may not be further posts of Hum-110-adjacent materials dribbling in as we go: there are a number of books I checked out from the library as potentially interesting, but which I didn't get to while we were reading related units. We'll see how it goes!
tozka: (travel nautical map)
[personal profile] tozka


At a time when scientific data on rising sea levels, melting ice, and ocean acidification are widely known, my role is not to repeat these figures, but to embody them, to bring them to life, to make them heard. Because understanding is no longer enough — one must feel in order to act.

This piece is an invitation to listen to a world in change. An active, committed listening that may, I hope, open the way to other narratives, to other possibilities.

melon: pepino

Friday, 10 July 2026 16:12
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird

Adrian came home from the supermarket with a lemon-sized melon, I think called "pepino." We have all tasted it, and it's disappointingly bland.

My thought was "bland cantaloupe," and Cattitude said there was a bit of a grassy flavor. Still, it was worth trying.

Before that, we went to the Copley Square farmers market, and bought a loaf of bread, a cabbage, beets, radishes, and blueberries. We also had lunch at the market, empanadas (beef and mushroom for me, plain beef for Adrian and Cattitude), followed by ice cream. Frutti Berri are there on Fridays, so I had saffron rose, and they went to FoMu, where Cattitude got a root beer float, his first in years, and Adrian had "Cookie Monster."

Excelling At Excel-ing

Friday, 10 July 2026 20:00
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Excelling At Excel-ing

Back in the day, I was a new hire and had to take a skills test to prove I knew how to use Excel. I'm talking about it with my boss.
Me: "Even though I proved I knew it in my interview?"
Boss: "We've been burned too many times by interviewees who outright lied and tried to fake it until they made it. They never made it."

Read Excelling At Excel-ing

OTW Guest Post: Atticus Yus

Friday, 10 July 2026 19:04
[syndicated profile] otw_news_feed

Posted by Lute

On occasion, the OTW shares posts from a guest, providing an outside perspective on the OTW or specific aspects of fandom. These posts express each individual’s personal views and do not necessarily reflect the views of the OTW or constitute OTW policy.

Atticus Yus (she/her) is a postgraduate student at Cambridge Digital Humanities, affiliated with Newnham College. A fanfiction writer herself, she is currently most active in the Identity V and Hannibal fandoms and enjoys baking banana bread in her free time. Today, Atticus talks about her research regarding fan communities with a particular focus on tagging systems and social networks.


How did you first find out about fandom and fanworks?

I owe my big sister everything for introducing me to fandom! Growing up, I remember her and her friends sitting in our family’s living room talking for hours about YuYu Hakusho and My Chemical Romance. She’s got a creative soul, writing her own fanfictions and serving as a beta reader for her friends too. She had fan art all over her childhood bedroom, which I thought was the coolest thing ever.

By the time I reached an age where I was discovering my own favourite media (back then, it was One Direction and The Hunger Games), she was quick to introduce me to fannish lingo, including “fanfiction” and “fan art.” Learning these terms eventually led me to websites like DeviantArt, QuoteV, and AO3. After enjoying other people’s fanwork, I decided to start creating my own stories.

Your research brings together fanfiction, consent, and reading practices. What first led you to think about reading fanfiction through the lens of consent?

I discovered fanfiction at the same age that I was first encountering sexuality. I consider fanfiction to have been my first exposure to content that challenged my understanding of consent as it was taught in school, where I was taught that “no means no,” though, never learned what happened when these rules were not followed. Through fanfiction, I encountered tags such as “dubious consent”, “consensual non-consent”, and “consensual but not safe or sane”. I had been taught such a clear framework of understanding consent that it felt intimidating to encounter content that seemed to challenge it. Later in adulthood, I became aware of fan conflict, such as pro-shipper and anti-shipper, which made it clear to me that fans are invested in conversations on ethics and consent. However, these debates have deep social roots in matters including shame, censorship, and American purity culture (Samantha Aburime’s 2022 article on this exact topic is useful here).

Witnessing pro-shipper and anti-shipper conflict online taught me there is much at stake regarding sexual content in fan spaces, and this led me to consider how consent is signalled in the first place. As an AO3 reader, I pay attention to tags before deciding whether to engage with a work. A tag such as “dubious consent” is not simply a descriptive label, but also a warning, invitation, or signal of how the author interprets consent in their content. I started to wonder whether consent tags operate on multiple levels: not only between fictional characters, but also between authors and readers.

Fanfiction spaces often rely on detailed tagging and content/authors notes. How do these systems shape a reader’s ability to give or withhold consent?

I think of the tagging system, summary, and author’s notes as paratexts: drawing on Gerard Genette, paratexts function as a threshold priming the reader’s interpretation before they have entered the text. In this sense, consent on AO3 is not located solely within the narrative but is negotiated before reading begins. However, paratexts are not universally consistent in usage. On AO3, authors assign tags to their own work, can choose to not provide archive warning, and may create tags too. Through my research, I identified what appears to be an informal gradient of consent, ranging from rape/non-con to enthusiastic consent. Yet I was unable to identify clear boundaries between categories such as “mildly dubious consent” and “extremely dubious consent.”

This ambiguity is not surprising. Understandings of consent are shaped by personal experience and cultural context rather than universal definitions. Thus, an author’s subjective interpretation may not align with a reader’s. Consequently, readers may encounter content they did not agree to. Tagging systems facilitate informed decision-making but cannot guarantee it; they rely on trust that authors have represented their work in ways readers will find meaningful and accurate.

Related to the praxis of consent around AO3’s usage, what are your thoughts on fanfiction (and AO3 in particular) becoming more well known with the mass media/audience? Have you noticed any changes within fandom spaces related to an increase in interest from people who enter fandom spaces without prior experience with fandom culture?

Although fanfiction is becoming more mainstream, I think it is often misunderstood as a textual object rather than a practice. I am thinking about a 2025 TikTok trend where users generate AI ‘fanfiction’ about themselves and their friends. I thought calling the generated text ‘fanfiction’ wasn’t quite right, because these works were not really fan produced. Recently, I was reading through the comments under OTW’s 2023 post “AI and Data Scraping on the Archive”, where it announced that AI generated content is not prohibited under its Terms of Service. I thought the comments caught onto a legitimate concern that resonates with my own research: what happens to fanfiction when we remove the fan?

I have also noticed more fanfiction being shared through screenshots on platforms like Instagram and X. In these cases, work is often circulated outside AO3 without author consent or the surrounding paratexts that shape reading practices. My assumption is that many writers (like myself) expect AO3 to function as a relatively contained space governed by its own norms of tagging and consent, and taking these works out of context disrupts fandom etiquette. I don’t have answers, but I ask myself questions like, how might new forms of automated or decontextualised “fanfiction” reshape consent practices altogether?

How did you hear about the OTW and what do you see its role as?

I first encountered the OTW through AO3. Recently, my research has depended heavily on Transformative Works and Cultures and Fanlore. Across these interactions, I understand the OTW’s role primarily through advocacy; it works to establish fandom culture as legitimate, and as deserving of protection and scholarly attention. Coming from English departments, this feels particularly personal to me, as fan studies was consistently dismissed as not properly literary by peers and faculty members alike.

But I also see the OTW as performing care work within fandom. AO3 emerged in response to the need for a stable, non-commercial space for fans to share their creative works without censorship and monetization by platform owners, as outlined in Astolat’s post, “An Archive of One’s Own.” I am intrigued by the post’s connection to Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own,” addressed to students at women colleges and touching on the importance of giving women the resources and private space to achieve creative freedom. Like Woolf’s essay, the OTW addressed an infrastructural gap that left fan communities online vulnerable and without a space of their own. Now of course, it isn’t perfect; as a woman of colour, I cannot disregard racism in fandom communities and AO3’s infrastructural failure to address this (refer to Alexis Lothian and Mel Stanfill’s 2021 article). But maintaining fandom infrastructure by providing an archive, preserving at-risk works, and keeping a wiki of community knowledge is essential to continuously improving the conditions of fan culture over time.

What fandom things have inspired you the most?

Squee! I love that so many fans have reclaimed fangirling. Specifically, the idea of passionately loving—or even being obsessed with—a piece of media, but not having to explain why. When I made the decision to pursue fandom during my graduate studies, I was always asked, why? Constantly explaining my decision felt redundant and even patronising. So, I am inspired by all the fangirls who squee unapologetically, proudly and loudly.


We encourage suggestions from fans for future guest posts, so contact us if you have someone in mind! If you enjoyed this post and would like to read more like it, we encourage you to look back at earlier guest posts.

Refundamentally Wrong

Friday, 10 July 2026 19:00
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

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Customer: "I wanna return my phone. I have the receipt."
Me: "Okay, thanks for the receipt. Give me the phone, and we can start the return process."
Customer: "I don’t have it."
Me: "I can’t return it without the product."
Customer: "It’s broken so you don’t need it. I just want my money back. I gave you the receipt. That's all you should need."

Read Refundamentally Wrong

Original: Haiku: late night with cats

Friday, 10 July 2026 12:30
teaotter: (Default)
[personal profile] teaotter posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: late night with cats (the bathroom edition)
Content notes: none
Challenge: Ear


Summary: Why I can never pee in peace, lol.

Read more... )

Bits and pieces

Friday, 10 July 2026 19:29
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin

I suppose people will never not be interested in the Mary Toft rabbit-birth case: this however is a somewhat different take born of going into a particular archive, Mary Toft and the Radical Birth Control Movement (an archive of which I have knowledge), though I am perhaps more interested that Griffith was asking Helena Wright to ask her side-piece, Kenneth Bruce MacFarlane, a distinguished historian, for reading recommendations. But that is because the ladies running that clinic, who were trying to make birth control a respectable cause were all into all sorts of what would now be considered polyamorous configurations.

(I will not advance my critiques from my personal knowledge of the birth control movement of the 20s and 30s....)

***

Baptism record at Manchester Cathedral offers insight into Black Mancunian life in Georgian-era England:

When the abolitionist Thomas Clarkson gave a sermon in 1787 at Manchester Cathedral – during the city’s first mass meeting against the transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans – he saw a “great crowd of black people standing round the pulpit”.
However, little is known about Black Mancunians in the Georgian era, which makes one recently rediscovered entry in parish records at Manchester Cathedral particularly significant.

***

The 6‑7 craze offered a brief window into the hidden world of children:

But as media scholars who study children’s culture, we didn’t view the meme with bewilderment or exasperation. Instead, we thought back to our own childhoods on three different continents – and all the secret languages we spoke.
....
With or without access to the internet, children will continue to transform language and games to suit their needs – which, yes, includes getting under the skin of adults.

Kidz b kidz, hmmmm?

***

Not precisely 'history from below' - this was still the monarch's court, after all - but looking beyond the obvious players and how much there is to discover about them beyond the immediately apparent: Dwarfism, Institutionalisation and Marginalisation at the Court in Early Bourbon France:

I aim to demonstrate through my new Transactions article that a meticulous examination of archival sources can reveal far more about the lives and activities of people with dwarfism – and marginalised people in general – than the archive’s apparent silence initially suggests.
At the same time, I hope this study can serve as another example, alongside my book on Louis XIII’s court, of the rich potential in an approach to court studies that de-centres the monarch, his ministers and absolutism to better understand the court – its institutions and its culture – in its own right.

***

The man who invented the Tube: or rather, had the idea and campaigned for it, died shortly before the opening of the Metropolitan line, which may have something to do with his absence from the annals.

Check-In Post - July 10th 2026

Friday, 10 July 2026 19:24
badly_knitted: (Get Knitted)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] get_knitted

Hello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.

Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?

There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.


This Week's Question: What's on your crafting wish list?


If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.

I now declare this Check-In OPEN!



Time Served

Friday, 10 July 2026 17:55
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Time Served

My friend had requested their holiday in advance and stated that, on the request, they had a plane flight that very day, so they could not do an overnight shift the night before. The scheduling manager didn’t care, so they were scheduled on an overnight anyway.

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Confessions From The Throne Room

Friday, 10 July 2026 17:00
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Confessions From The Throne Room

Customer: "I need to use the employee restroom."
Me: "That's in an employee-only area, ma'am. We have customer restrooms at the front of the store."
Customer: "I deserve to use the employee restroom."

Read Confessions From The Throne Room

2026 2nd Set of Ducklings

Thursday, 9 July 2026 17:08
yourlibrarian: Mama duck and babies (NAT-EdwinaBabies-yourlibrarian)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian posting in [community profile] common_nature


We spotted a second set of ducklings on the lake! This was somewhat distressing at first because the babies were following mama to the retaining wall, which she flew up onto and they were stuck below.

Read more... )

Sparkles & Shimmies

Friday, 10 July 2026 18:04
galadhir: a lovely tribal dancer in dark green choli and a red moroccan style belt with orange and yellow pom poms (tribal belly dancer)
[personal profile] galadhir

The lady who has run Shimmyfest for years, using it as a vehicle with which to raise money for Dementia UK and other charities, has decided that this year will be her last year.

This is a blow because there is nothing else in the area that combines a really modest ticket price, a wide guest-list, and two good workshops with professional teachers.

In fact there is nothing like it left in the area at all, except the smaller haflas that are put on by individual teachers for their particular classes.

So guess who decided that it couldn't be that hard to do, and volunteered to organize an Ely belly dance festival for midsummer next year, (along with a lovely lady who is much more experienced in this sort of thing.)

Couldn't be me, surely?

Anyway, we're in the process of finding a venue atm. We have small halls which will signal a very modest ambition, but will cost £120 all in, or a nice large hall with pub and cafe nearby, which is likely to come in at £370 but may indicate that we are attempting to go bigger and better.

That might revivify what seemed to be a slightly fading franchise. Or it might just cost us everything we might have raised in tickets.

I didn't expect the most important decision to come so early!

Birdfeeding

Friday, 10 July 2026 12:05
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is partly cloudy and warm.

I fed the birds. I haven't seen much activity yet.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 7/10/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

I've seen a few sparrows and house finches plus a male cardinal.

EDIT 7/10/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 7/10/26 -- I watered the new picnic table garden. I picked two more yellow pear tomatoes. The first sunflower in the septic garden is blooming -- medium height, medium-small single flower, yellow petals.

EDIT 7/10/26 -- I watered seedlings in the savanna.

EDIT 7/10/26 -- I watered plants in the house yard.

EDIT 7/10/26 -- I watered plants on the patio.

EDIT 7/10/26 -- I cracked open 4 apricot pits and got 3 good seeds. I cracked two batches of black cherry pits and bagged them in damp sand to cold-stratify in the refrigerator.

I watered the telephone pole garden.

I've seen at least 3 bats swooping along the edge of the yard. :D Fireflies are coming out.

As it is now dark, I am done for the night.

Dispatch: Fanfic: Crying over Birds

Friday, 10 July 2026 18:52
iserlohna: (Default)
[personal profile] iserlohna posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: Crying over Birds
Fandom: Dispatch
Rating: PG-13
Length: ~670
Content notes: people talking after sex and naked in bed
Author notes: ignores the explanation given ins the comic series

Summary: Courtney wants to know why Robert has the clipped ear


Crying over Birds )

Friday, 10 July 2026 09:48
lycomingst: (Default)
[personal profile] lycomingst
The electrician has come and gone. AND he has revealed to me the magic switch and how to unlock its secret.

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zvi: self-portrait: short, fat, black dyke in bunny slippers (Default)
still kind of a stealthy love ninja

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