December 11

Suddenly, a character says out of nowhere: “What the fuck is going on?"

I went to the premiere of the first commercially streaming AI-generated movies. (SL 404Media)
posted by DirtyOldTown at 2:27 PM - 27 comments

Fun with Flags, Land of Lincoln Edition

The Illinois Flag Commission has released the 10 finalists [PDF] for the new state flag design contest. Voting for the new flag design will begin in January 2025.
posted by Cash4Lead at 2:04 PM - 19 comments

🤘🏽 The Twelfth Hour is at Hand 🤘🏽

For our one-dozenth outing, feast your ears on this absolute gem of French female-fronted metalcore: NOVELISTS - Coda. [more inside]
posted by signal at 1:40 PM - 0 comments

One of the largest contributors to the overall aesthetic

Inspired heavily by the concepts behind American pop art and the styles of British pop artists such as David Hockney, Nagai focused on imaginations of a 1950s Americana landscape. Adapting the deep blue skies, relaxed ocean side settings and sleepy nighttime cityscapes from previous pop artists, Nagai developed his own style throughout the late 1970s. His work finally began to gain traction in Japan around the turn of the 1980’s and this coincided fortuitously with the rise of City Pop. from Hiroshi Nagai: Japan’s Sun-drenched Americana [Tokyo Cowboy]
posted by chavenet at 12:18 PM - 10 comments

please take me home with you and brush my tear away

"Once upon a time in the whimsical world of toys, Hasbro introduced an unconventional doll named Little Miss No Name in 1965. This eerie creation, inspired by the paintings of Margaret Keane and designed by Deet D’Andrade, was intended to be the antithesis of the glamorous Barbie, embodying a stark departure from the glitz and fashion. With its haunting features, Little Miss No Name quickly became a toy anomaly of the 1960s." She doesn’t have a pretty dress. She doesn’t have any shoes. She doesn’t even have a home. All she has is love. [more inside]
posted by mittens at 11:48 AM - 19 comments

The Greatest Showman: Richard Feynman

Physicist Angela Collier has a new video the sham legacy of Richard Feynman. After reading every book on Feynman, she covers the cottage industry of Feynman media, the Feynman bros in this cult of personality, how he did not write "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!" or any other book, and how the stories that Feynman tells about himself are almost certainly made up. [more inside]
posted by AlSweigart at 9:09 AM - 95 comments

Home Alone for the holidays

Patrick Explains HOME ALONE (And Why It's Great). Single link YouTube by Patrick Willems (previously) that's pretty great about a pretty great movie.
posted by skynxnex at 8:24 AM - 20 comments

You're gonna get what you deserve. Ho ho ho!

Nine Inch Noels, a medley of Christmas(?) songs with lyrics from Trent Reznor's thing, from Lore Sjöberg. (NSFW lyrics) [more inside]
posted by JHarris at 5:29 AM - 10 comments

The Hawk Tuah Memecoin Rug Pull is the Apotheosis of Bag Culture

You might win if you gamble, but the real money is in being the house. [more inside]
posted by Kitteh at 5:22 AM - 64 comments

Stoner Cats

Stoner Cats Stoner Cats (2021) is a cartoon that stars Mila Kunis, Ashton Kutcher and Chris Rock as cats that use medical marijuana. (on youtube) [more inside]
posted by jouke at 2:46 AM - 4 comments

In the rasp of today

Hence, we end up with a deadly conflict born of misinterpretations/colliding realities, and of course power imbalances, and so much history one poem or answer to a question can’t answer. I appreciate Adeena’s scholarly, poly-lingual investigation of a subject, and her exploratory and exploded use of language. As much as This Page reveals empathy for the complex realities and narratives of both sides, in the end, this poem is not neutral. It comes down against occupation and the horrors of a grossly lopsided war. from A New Visualized Poem Covers ‘Occupied Territory’ [Print]
posted by chavenet at 12:31 AM - 2 comments

December 10

“obedézcase, pero no se cumpla.”/obeyed, but not fulfilled

[Mexico] city’s metro hosts—and authorities unofficially sanction—a queer institution unlike any other.
“There are more intensities on the margins than in the center, where everyone is homogenized.” And the train connects these marginal intensities.
[Introduction probably NSFW] [more inside]
posted by rubatan at 10:39 PM - 10 comments

[00:01] or gtfo

Some mid-week silliness: Open the microwave as close as possible to 00:00 [SLMW?] via kottke
posted by slater at 9:01 PM - 21 comments

Get surreal, man, with Goethepunk

Get surreal, man, with Goethepunk

Scroll down endlessly, pick a favorite, come back and share [more inside]
posted by y2karl at 7:13 PM - 3 comments

Thylacoleo replica skeleton posed pouncing on tourists

Model of what may have been a real-life drop bear now on display in South Australia. A complete replica skeleton of Australia's largest mammalian predator [the marsupial lion, Thylacoleo, which went extinct around around 40,000 years ago] can now be seen pouncing at tourists visiting South Australia's World Heritage-listed Naracoorte Caves.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 6:44 PM - 10 comments

The Waiting

The Waiting : "Karen Lips is researcher and lives for several years in a tiny little shack in Costa Rica to observe frogs. When she leaves the cloud forest for a short time and returns, the frogs are gone. All of them. Karen sets out to find them – and encounters a horrible truth. Mysterious deaths occur all over the planet and have a similar pattern. Why have so many species vanished? And what does it all have to do with us? "
posted by dhruva at 5:18 PM - 8 comments

These are gorgeous machines

A Fabulous Collection of Antique Espresso Coffee Machines [Flashbak]
posted by chavenet at 11:43 AM - 22 comments

"Dumas began his Dr. Death radio show on KLSU in December of 1983"

"A small but influential independent record label ... C'est la Mort specialized in ethereal, ambient, dream pop, & darkwave bands." Ca. 1990, an interest in 4AD groups like His Name is Alive (2024 boxset; eponym for a quiescent MeFite) may have led you to early work by The Magnetic Fields (2024 Tiny Desk previously) on "Doctor Death's" compilations from C'est La Mort, also introducing artists like Area, The Millions, Orange, Collection d'Arnell-Andréa, Ivory Library, and The Arms of Someone New. A mainstay of the series was "a somewhat obscure post-punk band from San Francisco ... Often paired [live] with ... bands like Necropolis of Love." Contributing songs like "Market," "Rousseau's Rainbow," "Dilemma," etc., M-1 Alternative also had albums less available now, but their early work is available on Bandcamp. And KLSU is still going.
posted by Wobbuffet at 11:28 AM - 5 comments

Eat What You Kill

ProPublica, in conjunction with the Montana Free Press, has published a detailed expose into Helena oncologist Dr. Tom Weiner - detailing a history of questionable diagnoses and patient harm. [more inside]
posted by NoxAeternum at 9:57 AM - 36 comments

Ghost Rivers

Baltimore Buried These Streams. Now an Artist Is Bringing One Back. The new “Ghost Rivers” installation is a reminder of Baltimore’s hidden streams — and the visible costs of trying to control our urban waterways. Also: Daylighting: A Case Study of the Jones Falls River and How ‘Daylighting’ Buried Waterways Is Revitalizing Cities Across America.
posted by HumanComplex at 6:45 AM - 17 comments

It's maptacular!

The fire insurance maps produced by the Sanborn Map Company beginning in the 1860s are a rich and exceptionally detailed resource about American urban history. But they're also a beautiful collection of design and typography of the period. A new site brings together collections of digitized Sanborn Maps from libraries around the country to highlight the effusive design of the cover pages for each city. (via Kottke.)
posted by Horace Rumpole at 6:08 AM - 25 comments

"The United States’ wealthiest citizens...do not appear in the document"

As it was previously noted by people on Metafilter, the Pandora Papers and the Panama Papers had a strange lack of dirt on US oligarchs. Ever wonder why? [more inside]
posted by kmt at 5:28 AM - 22 comments

Are the fires of Hell a-glowing?

More than two decades after the original film popularized the "fast zombie" craze, we finally have our first look at Danny Boyle's long-awaited return to horror, and one of the best trailers in years: 28 YEARS LATER. Though the trailer's terrifying, cultlike atmosphere and snatches of atavistic violence are intriguing, the real star is the soundtrack: a tinny, 110-year-old poetry reading whose hypnotically repetitive words tromp relentlessly from prim recitation to jangling nerves to a hysterical, nightmarish climax. The poem, Rudyard Kipling's "Boots", was originally written to memorialize (and echo) the wretched forced marches of the Second Boer War (as former Navy SEAL Jocko Willink recites/explains), its grim refrain a verse from Ecclesiastes on the inevitability of death. The howling rendition from the trailer, made by early film star Taylor Holmes in 1915, has long been used by elite SERE training schools to psychologically break recruits. 2spooky4u? There are plenty of alternatives: pioneering composer Kay Swift at age 14 (1911) - the sonorous Peter Dawson (1930) - the melodramatic Eric Woodburn (1935) - the operatic Leonard Warren (1951) - folksy anarchist Leslie Fish (1991) - or cleanse the palette with the goofy Red Skelton parody, "Frogs."
posted by Rhaomi at 5:12 AM - 87 comments

World's most expensive dinosaur fossil goes on display at New York

The most expensive dinosaur fossil ever discovered will be on display in New York at the American Museum of Natural History. The giant stegosaurus fossil, dubbed "Apex", is 3.3 metres tall and 8.2 metres nose to tail and is one of the most complete fossils of this type of dinosaur in existence.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 4:13 AM - 13 comments

Diaspora dishes are strange in how they take on an identity of their own

The hankering for mulukhiyah is a unique hunger. When I lived in Europe for graduate school, it was the first meal I’d eat on my short visits home, texting my request before my plane even landed. It’s the food I crave when I haven’t been to my parents’ for supper in a while. I can call its garlicky taste to my mouth as readily as I can trick my ears into filling with the timbre of my dad’s voice when I’m miles away from him, traveling restlessly as we both love to do. Though my mom excels at every dish in her repertoire, the exhilaration of the roughly monthly cycle culminating in mulukhiyah makes me clap my palms and cheer like I’m 4. from The Kitchen with Two Doors by Kristina Kasparian [Longreads]
posted by chavenet at 12:35 AM - 9 comments

December 9

A Good Cry

Nikki Giovanni, poet, author, and thinker, has died aged 81.
posted by biogeo at 9:44 PM - 25 comments

Call for end to draconian police cautions for sex workers

Call for end to draconian police cautions for sex workers that last until age of 100. Police in England and Wales should be banned from issuing a draconian caution that exclusively targets sex workers, both politicians and campaigners have said. A "prostitute’s caution," unlike other police cautions, does not require a person to admit to an offence or agree to accept it. Police can issue them to anyone they have "reasonable cause" to believe has broken prostitution laws, meaning little evidence is required. [more inside]
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 4:07 PM - 21 comments

“I could promise it is indeed possible to slip on a banana peel…”

The History of Slipping on Banana Peels is a half hour documentary video essay by Jon Bois about the non-metaphorical act of slipping on a banana peel, as recorded throughout history by American newspapers.
posted by Kattullus at 1:47 PM - 25 comments

Inescapable around the world

‘Last Christmas’ was not about flash and musicianship, more framing the vocal sentiment of George Michael’s heartbreak and yearning. It’s a prime example of the HappySad nature of the best pop – sounding jolly and at odds to the mourning of a buggered-up relationship. He’s telling himself the series of lies that often accompany dealing with betrayal – does he want them back? Can he muster a full on ‘fuck you’? There’s more than a touch of obsessive behaviour about it. The “this year to save me from tears, I’ll give it to someone special”, is utter shade, and yet sung like he’s gently stroking your hair. from Transcendental Cheap Magic: Wham!’s ‘Last Christmas’ At 40 [The Quietus]
posted by chavenet at 11:44 AM - 45 comments

The 2024 Best-Ofs! - LP edition

Following are the "Best Albums of 2024" picks from a variety of media outlets. In most cases, these were a rank-ordered "Best 25" or "Best 50," although a few outlets simply did a best-of with no "winner" at no.1. I extracted the top 10 from those longer than 10 out of space considerations and listed them nos. 10 to 1, top to bottom. In a few cases, however, the albums were unranked and just over 10 in number, so I included all of them. Many of the following plus others are listed at AlbumOfTheYear.org. One thing I learned in compiling this: Boy, do media outlets hate consistency in capitalization (see: Billie Eilish/Beyoncé/Charli xcx LPs). And, so, in no particular order: [more inside]
posted by the sobsister at 9:58 AM - 43 comments

Don't Take Your Golden Guns to Clown College

US woman caught with golden gun in luggage at Sydney airport jailed for a year. [more inside]
posted by Slinga at 9:22 AM - 73 comments

"People who need access most are those who are most marginalized."

Censorship Trends for 2025, Part I Kelly Jensen for BookRiot, on Moms for Liberty's book-rating site, book-banning apps, LGBTQ book bans, Bible study in public schools, and Mike Huckabee's ties to new Texas curricula.
posted by box at 8:04 AM - 2 comments

Are birds real? New evidence will shock you

RAVEN is a new bird-inspired robot drone with impressive VTOL capabilities, and more importantly a very cute hopping ability.
posted by Stark at 7:31 AM - 18 comments

Funny Book: Sunshine Nails

"But beneath the dust jacket's bright yellows, purples and pinks is a novel of character studies that simmers with questions about work, class, generational divides and the expectations facing refugees making new homes in their asylums." [NPR] [more inside]
posted by cupcakeninja at 5:15 AM - 6 comments

Ignore the Great White Right North influencers at your peril

Of course, opinions about Canada’s demise will vary, but for some influencers — Canadian and American — it seems to go beyond making an argument. In some cases, Canada seems to function as a concept, a cautionary tale, a funhouse mirror for an American-leaning audience; it’s a useful target for taking aim at all the perceived ills of left-wing politics. [more inside]
posted by Kitteh at 5:06 AM - 39 comments

reinscription

i apologize. crochet erasure was never my intention. there are just some things i’ve tried & realized i’m not good at, emphatically: 2 pins are not better than 1! erasure is significant, please forgive me [medium]. my penance; your #freethread. are there apologies you wish you could make? things you've learned? or write about whatever (if you'd rather, feel free to just rock out to erasure) [more inside]
posted by HearHere at 4:28 AM - 55 comments

Poetry presents οια αν γενοιτο, things that might be

Good reading implies, and good writing demands of its readers, that the emotion should depend not on the name alone, but on the name understood. The name, indeed, rouses emotion, but rouses it through the memory of the thing; that is, through knowledge. And we have seen that no degree of unrealism in the imagination impairs this principle a whit. from CS Lewis: An unseen essay on truth and fiction [Grauniad [from 2013]; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 12:43 AM - 3 comments

December 8

Electric bikes and mopeds are cutting demand for oil

The world’s 280 million electric bikes and mopeds are cutting demand for oil far more than electric cars.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 3:19 PM - 91 comments

"You make me think of many men Once met, to be forgot again"

"In May 1915, Marianne Moore made her first appearance in Poetry. Then twenty-seven-years old...The second time Moore submitted poems to the magazine, Harriet Monroe rejected them. A rather aggrieved Moore fired back, "Printed slips are enigmatic things and I thank you for your criticism on my poems. I shall try to profit by it."" .."the late nineteen-fifties, when she was in her seventies, Marianne Moore became a star. She went on the “Tonight Show” to talk about the Brooklyn Dodgers with Jack Paar. The elderly poet was profiled in Sports Illustrated and featured on the cover of Esquire, with Jimmy Durante, Joe Louis, and others.George Plimpton picked her up in a limousine at her home in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, and escorted her to a game at Yankee Stadium." [more inside]
posted by clavdivs at 3:08 PM - 16 comments

The worst waiter in Seattle

Cafe Minnie's [was] widely considered to have the worst service in Seattle, even winning that category one year in a Seattle Weekly readers' poll. When I worked there for a six month period in 1995, I was the target of more customer complaints than any other server. Thus my claim to have been the worst waiter in Seattle. [more inside]
posted by ShooBoo at 2:14 PM - 40 comments

Warhammer 40k Scent of Pestilence Candle

And many other glorious holiday suggestions in My Heinous Gift Guide for Sworn Enemies [¡Hola Papi!]
posted by chavenet at 12:59 PM - 10 comments

Hark! Kate Beaton wins the Jan Michalski 2024 Award Prize for Literature

The acceptance speech by comic artist Kate Beaton. Kate Beaton (previously), a Nova Scotia artist noted for her Web comic Hark! A Vagrant, and the graphic novel Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands, as well as the children's animated show Pinecone & Pony, won the 2024 Jan Michalski Prize for world literature.
In her speech, Beaton reflects on her background, the effects of capitalism, and the role of underrepresented voices in the world.
PDF of her speech. PDF of the jury's decision.
posted by bouvin at 11:56 AM - 12 comments

the cube reminds people that they have hands. the hands remember.

Brady Haran interviews Ernő Rubik for Numberphile. YouTube, ten minutes.
posted by fantabulous timewaster at 11:42 AM - 3 comments

somewhat of an embarrassment

SCRATCH AND SNIFF STICKERS AND THE GAS PANIC OF ’87 Most Scratch and Sniff stickers are simple nose-based novelties, though they’ve seen other uses as diagnostic tools, too. As Baltimore Gas and Electric discovered in 1987, though, these stickers can also cause a whole lot of hullabaloo. Let’s explore how this nifty technology works, and how it can go—somewhat amusingly—wrong.
posted by Ten Cold Hot Dogs at 10:33 AM - 11 comments

Reframing masculinity

The Fearleaders are Europe's first all-male cheerleading squad and have been subverting Austria’s gender stereotypes for the past decade at roller derby events and the EuroGames. Plus they have an annual pinup calendar release party that looks like fun.
posted by autopilot at 9:25 AM - 5 comments

UNITED HELLCARE

...organizations are not nameless and faceless. They are groups of people, and people are responsible for decisions... A single link 13 minute overview of United Healthcare from 2023.
posted by loquacious at 8:49 AM - 29 comments

Sequential Gifts Beyond The Chocolate Frontier

"'Tis the season for advent calendar shopping (Can you believe how close Christmas is now?) There are those who march to the beat of a different drummer boy – and that’s where these wild, weird and wonderful alternative advent calendars for 2024 come in." [more inside]
posted by cupcakeninja at 8:36 AM - 10 comments

"Noodle hop hop"

Jerboa are a furry little rodent version of tyrannosaurus rex. They hop a lot, vary in ear sizes across the various species, and have interesting bone structure in their feet. Plus, they're so cute! But not the best pets, so it's best to stick a game about them.
posted by Brandon Blatcher at 6:22 AM - 14 comments

A Tournament of Introductions to the Middle Ages

"Exploring the Middle Ages through Chess" is a short video by Elizabeth Wickersham at Middle Ages for Educators, a project hosted at Princeton University. One source for the video is Alfonso X's 13th Century Book of Games, available in translation [PDF] and digital reproduction. But the video is just one of 16 open access videos you can vote on through Dec. 29. Which of this year's brief introductory lessons on the Middle Ages should advance to the next round on the way to a $1000 prize? [more inside]
posted by Wobbuffet at 5:27 AM - 6 comments

The Fall of the House of Assad

For more than half a century, Syria has been ruled by the Assad family -- thirty years by the elder Hafez, and nearly as long by his son Bashar -- a brutally authoritarian reign that, following the Arab Spring in 2011, devolved into an even more brutal civil war that has claimed half a million lives. The deeply complicated conflict, a bloody multipolar struggle between the Russia-backed Assad regime, the US-backed opposition forces, Iran-backed Hezbollah, the Kurdish leftist enclave in Rojava (and its Turkish antagonists), various ISIS-aligned terror cells, and myriad competing tribes, warlords, and sub-groups, has been more or less static since a 2020 ceasefire. That is, until a surprise offensive late last month by the Islamist opposition group HTS triggered a pile-on from all sides that broke through Aleppo, Homs, and finally Damascus, swiftly collapsing the Ba'athist government in a matter of days and driving Assad out of power (and out of the country). The regime's stunning fall is a massive blow to Russia, reshaping the balance of power and leaving an unprecedented power vacuum as a shattered nation looks to the future. [more inside]
posted by Rhaomi at 3:06 AM - 114 comments

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