July 17, 2019

The Long Road to Pride

Perhaps a little late, maybe many of you already saw it, but this Dublin Bus Pride video sweetly bridges the gap between the queers that came before us and the younger queers coming up. [more inside]
posted by nikaspark at 10:04 PM PST - 19 comments

Streaming Things

Netflix actually lost subscribers (Vulture) in the US this quarter; this hasn't happened since the DVD days of 2011. Maybe it's due to 2019's higher prices (Variety). Global subscriptions continue to grow, however, and most watchers are already outside the US: the next 100 million subscribers might come from India (hindustan times), and today the company announced a cheaper mobile plan there (NYT). [more inside]
posted by sylvanshine at 8:38 PM PST - 76 comments

Ricky, Renuncia!

This was the fifth day of protests in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where thousands have gathered to call for the resignation of Governor Ricardo Rosselló. Last week, corruption charges were filed against Rosselló and 900 pages of private messages were leaked - peppered with a number of sexist and homophobic remarks and making light of the death toll from Hurricane Maria. Rosselló has so far refused calls to resign. The police chief, Henry Escalera, made a statement on Monday claiming that the PRPD will defend democracy in Puerto Rico (meaning, in this case, the governor) "with the last drop of blood" (Spanish language source). [more inside]
posted by dinty_moore at 8:18 PM PST - 33 comments

A woman’s responsibility for everyone else’s spills

"I still am struck at that assertion of power, the arrogant nonchalance of someone who travels to work with nothing on his person but his phone, his wallet, and his keys. Since the spill, I notice them all the time — in particular, on my way home one night, a tall, dark-haired Italian model–type man in a super-slim suit and long, narrow shoes who seemed not to have room on his person for an extra credit card, let alone a stack of paper towels cadged from the bathroom at work, just in case. He looked like he believed he was Important, and maybe he was. The message encoded in empty spaces where a briefcase or a backpack might have been was this: I have people to carry things for me. Golf caddies. Bell hops. Assistants. Women."
posted by Lycaste at 7:33 PM PST - 95 comments

‘We feel useless, alone, bored, guilty, horny’

Tattoos, tans and techno: the photographers capturing the unseen Beirut.
posted by Ahmad Khani at 7:05 PM PST - 5 comments

Amazon promotion error: we have cameras.

During this year's Amazon's Prime Day promotion, camera equipment with street prices ranging from $500 to $13,000 were briefly sold for $94.48, leading to a feeding frenzy, some users having their accounts suspended for the suspicious activity of buying too much. [more inside]
posted by ardgedee at 6:37 PM PST - 25 comments

This Is Why America Is Falling Behind In Space

Kids in America want to be YouTubers. Kids in China want to go to space. With the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing just days away, a post on the NasaWatch blog gave details on a new Harris Poll survey. The survey found that children in the US and the United Kingdom were 3x as likely to want to be YouTubers or vloggers as astronauts when they grow up. 56% of kids in China said they wanted to be an astronaut. [more inside]
posted by zooropa at 6:31 PM PST - 55 comments

Richard Massingham's LSD Trip

Breakfast (Cyriak, YT) The newest from Cyriak, this remix of British PSA actor Richard Massingham's short Pedestrian Crossing goes in all the directions you would expect of Cyriak.
posted by CrystalDave at 6:12 PM PST - 17 comments

Now, the dream cars of tomorrow!

Created in 1956, Design for Dreaming [10m video] is an industrial short film performed entirely in song, in which a dreaming woman is whisked away by a masked man to the General Motors Motorama, then a Kitchen of the Future, then off to romance on the highway. It makes about as much sense as that sounds like. [more inside]
posted by tocts at 6:11 PM PST - 18 comments

Self-Compassion: Simply Part of Being Alive

"Loving ourselves points us to capacities of resilience, compassion, and understanding within that are simply part of being alive." A curated collection of links with inclusive materials so that many groups of folks can access a space of self-compassion. Be well, care for yourselves in troubled times. [more inside]
posted by fairlynearlyready at 3:18 PM PST - 18 comments

“Un cafè non s'arrefuta mai.”

Il grande scrittore siciliano, autore della fortunata serie di romanzi sul commissario di Vigata, è morto oggi a 93 anni. Dai romanzi al teatro fino alle prese di posizione sulla politica, l'Italia piange uno dei suoi più grandi autori contemporanei. Nessun funerale pubblico, ma da giovedì 18 luglio dalle ore 15 chi vorrà potrà dare l'ultimo saluto al cimitero Acattolico a Testaccio a Roma dove sarà sepolto Andrea Camilleri, writer of the wildly popular Inspector Montalbano books, has died at the age of 93. [more inside]
posted by PussKillian at 3:01 PM PST - 16 comments

C'mon, we gotta get out of here

Pee Wee's Jurassic Adventure
posted by OverlappingElvis at 2:37 PM PST - 7 comments

Viaje virtual a la Montaña de Siete Colores, Cusco, Peru

Vinicunca or Winikunka (Wikpedia), also called Montaña de Siete Colores (Trip Advisor), Montaña de Colores or Rainbow Mountain (Atlas Obscura), is a naturally colorful mountain. The rise in average temperatures in the Andean region has caused the snow on mountain to melt away, exposing these sedimentary layers. Studies done on samples taken from the site indicate that the colors exhibited are due to diverse mineral composition (Rainbow Mountain Peru blog), leading to numerous Instagram visitors (Insta x2). Tourists have also shared their views via Google Streetview panoramas, allowing you to virtually hike along to the final vista, in (hypersaturated) sun or snow
posted by filthy light thief at 2:14 PM PST - 1 comments

"'Titanic' made me realize that I was controlled by the regime"

Smuggling 20,000 USB sticks loaded with the latest Hollywood films might seem like an unlikely way to try to overthrow the North Korean regime—but that’s exactly what Flashdrives for Freedom has in mind.
posted by Johnny Wallflower at 1:20 PM PST - 23 comments

How the chicken crossed the Red Sea

Asst. Professor of Anthropology Dr. Helina Woldekiros studies ancient chicken bones. Her research spans the discovery of the earliest known instances of domesticated chickens arriving in Africa via ancient trade routes from Asia, as well as the development of a long legged meatier thighed African chicken preferred for courtship rituals.
posted by Mrs Potato at 12:42 PM PST - 6 comments

Roma, nuovo regolamento di polizia urbana

New Urban Regulations for the City of Rome

"Exasperated by the sometimes louche behaviour of tourists, city authorities are cracking down on eating snacks in public places and even bouncing pushchairs and wheeled suitcases down the staircases of historic monuments such as the Spanish Steps." [more inside]
posted by shenderson at 12:39 PM PST - 16 comments

you ever take it off any sweet jumps?

Jumping a bicycle over the Tour de France peloton, like you do.
posted by cortex at 12:37 PM PST - 34 comments

Baseball, baseball, he-man hit the baseball By the power of greyskull

The Lonely Island Presents: The Unauthorized Bash Brothers Experience is a Netflix special by comedy rap group The Lonely Island. Billed as a "visual poem",[1] the special is directed by Mike Diva and Akiva Schaffer and stars Andy Samberg and Schaffer as Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire, respectively. It is presented as a rap album written and performed by Canseco and McGwire in the 1980s, when the pair was known as the Bash Brothers while playing for the Oakland Athletics [more inside]
posted by Carillon at 12:20 PM PST - 12 comments

It took nearly 30 minutes before they realized their mistake

Notre-Dame came far closer to collapsing than people knew. This is how it was saved.
posted by Chrysostom at 12:03 PM PST - 19 comments

John Paul Stevens, 1920-2019

Stevens served 35 years on the Supreme Court and became a leading liberal voice. He died Monday, aged 99, after a stroke. Stevens was nominated by Gerald Ford in 1970 and came to the Court as a moderate midwestern Republican. He was a staunch defender of the separation of church and state and later would be a voice against the death penalty*, in favor of affirmative action, and in favor of abortion rights. Recently, he spoke against the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh, called for the repeal of the second amendment, and threw out the first pitch at a Cubs game, which he described as the highlight of his career. [more inside]
posted by stillmoving at 12:02 PM PST - 28 comments

Human races are not like dog breeds: refuting a racist analogy

In 1956, evolutionary biologist J.B.S. Haldane posed a question to anthropologists: “Are the biological differences between human groups comparable with those between groups of domestic animals such as greyhounds and bulldogs…?” It reads as if it were posted on social media today. The analogy comparing human races to dog breeds is not only widespread in history and pop culture, but also sounds like scientific justification for eschewing the social construction of race, or for holding racist beliefs about human nature. Here we answer Haldane’s question in an effort to improve the public understanding of human biological variation and “race”—two phenomena that are not synonymous. [more inside]
posted by sciatrix at 9:40 AM PST - 56 comments

“has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away starving“

“Before all else, we must pursue a vision of the common good (by whatever charitable means we can) that presumes that the basis of law and justice is not the inviolable right to private property, but rather the more original truth taught by men such as Basil the Great, Gregory of Nyssa, Ambrose of Milan, and John Chrysostom: that the goods of creation belong equally to all, and that immense private wealth is theft – bread stolen from the hungry, clothing stolen from the naked, money stolen from the destitute.” What Lies Beyond Capitalism? A Christian Exploration (Plough)
posted by The Whelk at 9:04 AM PST - 21 comments

There was no time for reminiscing. She had a date with a firing squad.

She Caught Bullets with Her Bare Hands — and Made Magic’s Glass Ceiling Disappear: When her husband died and left her penniless, audacious Adelaide Hermann transformed from lowly assistant to "the Queen of Magic."
posted by Etrigan at 8:55 AM PST - 4 comments

#typicalinstagramhashtagoveruse

Baz Furnell draws mandalas. Do you want to draw mandalas like Baz Furnell? [more inside]
posted by jacquilynne at 8:34 AM PST - 9 comments

treasure, but also guillotines

60 carats of meteorite-made glass. Guillotine signet rings. Bejeweled fox heads. Victorian crystal pendants with "a Westie who apparently was just caught pooping in a shoe." All these and more in Dearest, a newsletter by Monica McLaughlin on unusual antique and estate jewelry. [more inside]
posted by joyceanmachine at 7:48 AM PST - 13 comments

A Visit with the Glacier Squad

For 35 years, a scientist and his team have been taking the pulse of 10 coastal glaciers. The diagnosis is in. [more inside]
posted by poffin boffin at 7:21 AM PST - 10 comments

Brain hardware support for Bayesian processing spotted

Brain hardware support for Bayesian processing spotted. “We have never seen such a concrete example of how the brain uses prior experience to modify the neural dynamics by which it generates sequences of neural activities, to correct for its own imprecision. This is the unique strength of this paper: bringing together perception, neural dynamics, and Bayesian computation into a coherent framework, supported by both theory and measurements of behavior and neural activities,” says Mate Lengyel, a professor of computational neuroscience at Cambridge University, who was not involved in the study.
posted by aleph at 6:53 AM PST - 12 comments

More capable than your smartphone

Your toaster probably has more processing power, but can it get you to the moon? An appreciation of the Apollo Guidance Computer. [more inside]
posted by backseatpilot at 6:13 AM PST - 30 comments

It’s the Twine that Binds

99 Percent Invisible goes on a delightful road trip across the US to investigate the true mystery of our time: who has the world’s greatest ball of twine, how were they made, and who really made them? [more inside]
posted by adrianhon at 4:12 AM PST - 25 comments

It's okay to be good and not great

What if striving to be great is what's holding you back? “Good is the enemy of great” is one of the most popular self-improvement expressions there is... It sounds appealing and rolls off the tongue nicely, but there’s a good chance it’s downright wrong."
posted by smoke at 4:07 AM PST - 46 comments

Piano composition

Nahre Sol explains really clearly how you can go from simple to complex when composing music for the piano. [more inside]
posted by Stark at 3:34 AM PST - 6 comments

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