sigh

Monday, January 12th, 2026 22:27
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
One character in my Outgunned game gets a laptop as part of his starting gear. Game is set in 1977 so I told the university age player he could have a programmable calculator or a slide rule.

"What's a slide rule?"

Magpie Monday

Monday, January 12th, 2026 21:22
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer is hosting Magpie Monday today with a theme of "Loose Threads." Leave prompts, get ficlets!

Read more... )

Amber in the east

Tuesday, January 13th, 2026 02:20
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

Well, now, for all those doubting Thomases who insist that there was no contact between western Eurasia, Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia in antiquity:

"The Amber Trade along the Southwestern Silk Road from 600 BCE-220 CE." Lü, Jing et al. Palaeoentomology 8, no. 6 (December 29, 2025): 679-682. https://www.mapress.com/pe/article/view/palaeoentomology.8.6.10.

An ant inside Baltic amber
Unpolished amber stones

Abstract

Amber holds significant historical importance in China, symbolizing not only the glory of ancient Chinese art and culture but also reflecting the development of cross-regional trade in antiquity. Evidence shows that Burmese and Baltic amber became widely popular during the Han dynasty (202 BCE–220 CE) and could be imported through various routes (Liu et al., 2023a, b; Zhao et al., 2023; Li et al., 2025). During this period, the Euro-Asia Steppe Trade Road was predominantly used for the import of Baltic amber, while the Maritime Silk Route might also facilitate the amber trade (Li et al., 2025). Additionally, the Southwestern Silk Route is regarded as a crucial pathway for amber trade in ancient Southern China. This overland route stretched from Central China through the mountainous regions of Sichuan, Guizhou, and Yunnan, extending to Myanmar and other Southeast Asian countries (Elias, 2024). The ancient Ailao Regional States, serving as a key node along the Southwestern Silk Road, encompassed southwestern Yunnan (China), northern Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, and eastern Assam (India) (Sun, 2016). Notably, the territory of Ailao Regional States included the Burmese amber deposits in the northern Myanmar, which was also recorded in the Han historical records as the amber origin (Fan, 1965). In addition, several amber artifacts from the same period have been discovered in the Dian Kingdom, which is primarily located in Yunnan and borders the Ailao Regional States (Zhao, 2016). While there is considerable evidence suggesting that the Southwestern Silk Route played a significant role in the amber trade, there is a lack of empirical evidence detailing its specific functions in the transportation of amber.

 

Etymology

From Middle English ambre, aumbre, from Old French aumbre, ambre, from Arabic عَنْبَر (ʕanbar, ambergris), from Middle Persian (ʾnbl /⁠ambar⁠/, ambergris). Compare English lamber, ambergris. Displaced Middle English smulting (from Old English smelting (amber)), Old English eolhsand (amber), Old English glær (amber), and Old English sāp (amber, resin, pomade).

    • The nucleotide sequence "UAG" is named "amber" for the first person to isolate the amber mutation, California Institute of Technology graduate student Harris Bernstein, whose last name ("Bernstein") is the German word for the resin "amber".

(Wiktionary)

The English word amber derives from Arabic ʿanbar عنبر from Middle Persian (ʾnbl /ambar⁠/, "ambergris") via Middle Latin ambar and Middle French ambre. The word referred to what is now known as ambergris (ambre gris or "gray amber"), a solid waxy substance derived from the sperm whale. The word, in its sense of "ambergris", was adopted in Middle English in the 14th century.

In the Romance languages, the sense of the word was extended to Baltic amber (fossil resin) from as early as the late 13th century. At first called white or yellow amber (ambre jaune), this meaning was adopted in English by the early 15th century. As the use of ambergris waned, this became the main sense of the word.

The two substances ("yellow amber" and "gray amber") conceivably became associated or confused because they both were found washed up on beaches. Ambergris is less dense than water and floats, whereas amber is denser and floats only in concentrated saline, or strong salty seawater though less dense than stone.

The classical names for amber, Ancient Greek ἤλεκτρον (ēlektron) and one of its Latin names, electrum, are connected to a term ἠλέκτωρ (ēlektōr) meaning "beaming Sun". According to myth, when Phaëton, son of Helios (the Sun), was killed his mourning sisters became poplar trees, and their tears became elektron, amber. The word elektron gave rise to the words electric, electricity, and their relatives because of amber's ability to bear a charge of static electricity.

(Wikipedia)

Electrifying!

Warms the cockles of your heart.

 

Selected readings

  • "China Babel" (3/26/24) — with numerous important references
  • "Celto-Sinica" (12/30/25)
  • Correspondences between Old Chinese and Proto-Celtic Words”, by Julie Lee Wei, Sino-Platonic Papers, 373 (December, 2025), 1-85.
  • "Volts before Volta" (1/3/26)
  • The Baghdad Battery: Experimental Verification of a 2,000-Year-Old Device Capable of Driving Visible and Useful Electrochemical Reactions at over 1.4 Volts", by Alexander Bazes, Sino-Platonic Papers, 377 (January, 2026), 1-20.
  • "Battery-Powered Prayers" (1/8/26)
  • "The Trans-Eurasian Exchange: The Prehistory of Chinese Relations with the West", by Andrew Sherratt, published posthumously in Victor H. Mair, ed., Contact and Exchange in the Ancient World (Honolulu:  University of Hawaii Press, 2006), pp. 30-61.
  • Joyce C. White and Elizabeth G. Hamilton,The transmission of early bronze technology to Thailand: new perspectives”, Journal of World Prehistory 22 (2009), 357–97 (Google Scholar)
  • Hajni Elias, H, "The Southwest Silk Road: artistic exchange and transmission in early China," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 87 (2024), 319–344. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0041977X24000120
  • "The Wool Road of Northern Eurasia" (4/12/21) — comment:
  • Annie Gottlieb reminds me that there was also an Amber Road. I had written about that in various places, and was fascinated by the fact that there is clear evidence for flourishing trade along this route from the Baltic to the Mediterranean already during Neolithic times (although recent scholarship emphasizes the last three thousand years). 
  • — traceable right over the Alps.
  • That further reminded me of this lecture that was given in my department on July 13, 2017: "Wine Road before the Silk Road: Hypotheses on the Origins of Chinese and Eurasian Drinking Culture". It was delivered by Peter Kupfer, Professor, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany.
  • Liu, Q., Zhang, Y.H.., Li, X.P., Qin, X. & Li, Q.H. (2023b) Some amber artifacts excavated from tombs of the Han Dynasty in Hunan Province. Journal of Gems and Gemmology, 25, 146–157. https://doi.org/10.15964/j.cnki.027jgg.2023.04.013
  • Luo, E.H. (2000) Chinese “Southwestern Silk Road” in the Han and Jin Dynasties. Journal of Sichuan University (Philosophy and Social Sciences Edition), 1, 84–105. [In Chinese]
  • Na, X.X. (2020) The research of the gemmological characteristics and colour grading of Burmese amber. Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming, 34–40. [In Chinese]
  • Shi, Z.T., Xin, C.X. & Wang, Y.M. (2023) Spectral characteristics of unique species of Burmese amber. Minerals, 13, 151. https://doi.org/10.3390/min13020151
  • Sun, J. (2016) The spatio-temporal patterns and geographical imagination of ethnic groups in the Southwest of China, among Qin and Han Dynasties. China Social Sciences Press, Beijing, 530 pp. [In Chinese]
  • The Archaeological Team of Guizhou Provincial Museum (1979) The tombs of the Han Dynasty in Xingyi and Xingren, Guizhou Province. Cult Relics, 5, 20–33. [In Chinese]
  • Zhao, D. (2016). Exotic beads and pendants in Ancient China: From Western Zhou to Eastern Jin Dynasty. Science Press, Beijing, pp. 103–107. [In Chinese]
  • Zhao, T., Peng, M.H., Yang, M.X., Lu, R., Wang, Y.M. & Li, Y. (2023) Effects of weathering on FTIR spectra and origin traceability of archaeological amber: The case of the Han Tomb of Haihun Marquis, China. Journal of Archaeological Science, 153, 105753. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2023.105753
  • "Of a Persian spymaster and Viking Rus' in medieval East Asia: Scythia Koreana and Japanese Waqwaq" (6/1/25) — from Scandinavia to Korea and Japan; strikingly illustrated
  • Victor H. Mair, "Language and Script:  Biology, Archaeology, and (Pre)history", International Review of Chinese Linguistics, 1.1 (1996), 31-41 (large format, twin columns) — hard to get hold of, but well worth the effort

    plus hundreds of Language Log posts documenting east-west contact in ancient times by Lucas Christopoulos, Brian Pellar, Sara de Rose, and others.

[Thanks to Ted McClure]

ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
These poems are spillover from the January 6, 2026 Poetry Fishbowl. They were inspired and sponsored by Anthony Barrette. They also fill the "Up the River" square in my 1-1-26 card for the Public Domain Day Bingo fest. These poems are the first batch in the collection Haiku for Natural Monuments of Japan.

Read more... )

Poem: "Fight Less, Cuddle More"

Monday, January 12th, 2026 20:09
ysabetwordsmith: Damask smiling over their shoulder (polychrome)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This poem is spillover from the January 6, 2026 Poetry Fishbowl. It was inspired and sponsored by [personal profile] janetmiles. It also fills the "Soup to Nuts" square in my 1-1-26 card for the Public Domain Day Bingo fest. This poem belongs to the Big One and Mercedes threads of the Polychrome Heroics series.

Read more... )

Wash away.

Monday, January 12th, 2026 20:18
hannah: (Laundry jam - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
Challenge #6

Top 10 Challenge. Post your answer to today’s challenge in your own space and leave a comment in this post saying you did it.

Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so. Also, feel free to entice engagement by giving us a preview of what your post covers.


Top Ten Times I Called It In And Walked Away

In no particular order, not alphabetical, chronological, or according to any level of importance -

1. Supernatural - I know people who watched it all and my hat's off to them, but after season eight, I knew it wasn't for me anymore.

2. Teen Wolf - sometime in season three or four, it went from being a show on MTV to an MTV show, and I was done.

3. House - end of season five or six, when not only had the characters grown stale, but the lighting had gone sour.

4. True Blood - somewhere in there, between seasons, I realized I couldn't do it anymore.

5. Game of Thrones - for all that I was enjoying myself, I realized it was a provisional, conditional love, and the creators had violated the last of those provisions.

6. Marvel comic movie adaptations - animated and live-action Spider-Man movies, Deadpool, the X-Men region, TV shows, the MCU as a whole. Much like House, the lighting's sour and the characters aren't nearly as much fun to watch anymore. I'll still come back from time to time, and leaving the movies is different from leaving the fandom, and it's not my fault they set standards that they then failed to meet.

7. X-Men comics in general and Joss Whedon in particular - because even though I watched Buffy and Angel long after walking away from Whedon, I knew from seeing him kill off a character he said he loved writing that he wasn't someone I could trust anymore, and when Marvel gave the go-ahead for that move on top of all the other repeated future ends of the world, I knew I couldn't trust them either.

8. No small number of fandom-based podcasts - because I don't have much patience for "um" and "like" and "you know" and other such filler words when I know you've taken notes and prepared for this well in advance, and you've also set up multiple Patreon tiers. When there's money involved, I expect you to use your time better than that.

9. Stargate Atlantis - because for all the raw entertainment value it offered, that value came tempered with a feeling of obligation and a gradual lack of playfulness - which can be done, provided the show commits to being more serious. I didn't get a sense of that.

10. Doctor Who - because the tidal nature of the show meant it'd gone out, and I never bothered to wander back to find if it's come back in, which told me all I needed to know about how much I'd enjoy spending more time with it.

Let me emphasize this isn't an anti-rec list, this isn't a set of warnings about not getting into something to begin with, this isn't even much of a set of complaints. This is something that, for all the frustrations involved, makes me happy because learning to know when to stop is a very grown-up skill. Knowing when you need a break or you've had enough takes work, and acting on that takes additional work. It's something that can be applied to situations more serious than a TV show - a friend who's no longer fun to hang out with, a job that's draining you dry. Walking away from something that ultimately doesn't mean much makes it easier to do it for something significantly more serious.

I could probably come up with another five or ten without much trouble, but if I did, it'd turn into an airing of grievances instead of a meditation on learning a new skill in a safe, controlled environment.

two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Poem: "Hemma Bäst"

Monday, January 12th, 2026 19:54
ysabetwordsmith: Family and horse in front of barn (Hart's Farm)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This poem came out of the January 6, 2026 Poetry Fishbowl. It was inspired by prompts from [personal profile] nsfwords and [personal profile] wyld_dandelyon. It also fills the "Cup of Coffee" square in my 1-1-26 card for the Public Domain Day Bingo fest. This poem has been sponsored by [personal profile] janetmiles. It belongs to the series Hart's Farm.

Read more... )

Picked three months and photos at random!

Monday, January 12th, 2026 19:54
heuradys: (Travel)
[personal profile] heuradys posting in [community profile] threeforthememories
This is one of the men's rooms at The House on The Rock in Spring Green, WI, where we spent part of our whirlwind off-season vacation at the end of April. Not the warmest time for places like Milwaukee or The Dells, but a lot fewer people!



more animals in WI here, which seems weird since I'm in Minnesota )

it's winter, you get penguins

Monday, January 12th, 2026 20:44
tsuki_no_bara: a group of emperor penguins with "the big chill" in all caps (pengies)
[personal profile] tsuki_no_bara
hello my flist! i had such high hopes for the new year and, just, pfft. it's [community profile] snowflake_challenge season and i haven't even posted for that. oy.

anyway i hope your 2026 has been decent-to-good so far or at least not worse than 2025.

for new year's i went to my sister's and we went out for dinner (delish) and watched a lot of lotr, pausing only to watch the ball drop in times square. i like a good tradition but she may or may not want to do something different this year. we'll see. and for christmas she came to my house and we drove around to look at people's holiday lights and got chinese takeout and watched wake up, dead man on netflix because we both felt too meh to go out. (i liked it but i think i liked the first one the best.) and like four days before that my cousin's youngest kid got married in dc and i brought a cold with me and lost my voice at the wedding. wtf. that made it very difficult to talk to cousins which did not stop me. but it also meant i was still sick or recovering for the entirety of my time off. whiiine. at least i had two weeks off to cough up a lung and sit on my couch and be tired, rather than having to take sick days or work from home a lot. but still! i had a lot of time off and couldn't even enjoy most of it! and i had plans! which were mostly "watch tv, work on holiday project for writing group, start pumpkin spice cross stitch". sigh.

(while in dc my sister and i did a little sightseeing, which included a farmer's market down the street from the hotel - it was SO WINDY but there were lots of dogs - a walk around the washington monument, a stroll down the reflecting pool, and a little talk by a park ranger in the lincoln memorial.)

we got snow a couple times tho, that was nice. i'm a big fan of waking up to snow on the ground. :D especially new year's day! it was just enough to shovel but if it had been, say, four inches, i would've enjoyed that too.

during my time off i met admin s who works at the libraries for lunch and a week later i met one of the admins m for lunch and both of those things were really nice, partly because i enjoy a lunch out and partly because it was just nice to see people. and i never see admin s because i don't work with her any more. i also had mexican brunch with [livejournal.com profile] tamalinn and friend a and friend a's hubs and that was fun and also delicious. and saturday i got a haircut. :D

before the haircut i went to cousins j&m's for brunch and to say hi and goodbye to their kids before they went back to school, and friday night my sister and i took cousin p on dad's side out for dinner for her birthday. it was yummy (i had black pasta with shrimp and calamari) and they brought cousin p a slice of flourless chocolate cake for her birthday. my sister and i ate most of it.

work re-entry was fine and going to campus was weird because it's been like three weeks since i was there. classes don't start until february so it's very quiet but again, it's nice to see people.

things i did in november and december:

went record album/antique shopping with tamalinn and friend a and bought the go-gos' beauty and the beat, heart's little queen, and a cookbook from the 50s full of buffet recipes
saw wicked pt 1 (again) in preparation for seeing wicked pt 2
went out to dinner with my sister and cousin j (of j&m)
fetched the mothership at the airport for tday
went out for bday dinner with mom, sister, cousins j&r, and the aforementioned lone cousin j
got snowed on in harvard square :DDD
had brunch with cousins from mom's side
bought a dress for the wedding
did not need to buy shoes
had dinner with cousins from dad's side
had mom and sister over for dinner (i made pork chops because i could)
went to j&m's for tday
ate a lot
saw wicked pt 2 (not bad but i liked pt 1 better, also why did the story have to be two movies?)
went to snowport (boston holiday market, down by the seaport) where i bought a print of a pickle sign and saw the lobster nativity
borrowed a bolero jacket from one of the admins m for the wedding because the dress is sleeveless and it was a jewish wedding and i'd have to cover my shoulders
went to the holiday market at the somerville armory and bought a blockprint of a medieval looking fish and a print of my favorite local bridge
one of the vendors had a print with a drawing of a guillotine and the legend "a better world is possible!" heh.
watched red one (so cute, so silly)
went to friend r's to watch the thin man because it's set around christmas and while i don't know how successful it was as a murder mystery i liked nick and nora as a couple and overall enjoyed it
saw the housemaid (had some twists i appreciated and i liked it)
curled lots, made a couple good shots and a lot more acceptable-to-missed shots
finished the lowdown (liked it, recommend it, didn't love the way the murder plot shook out)
watched talasmasca: the secret order (partly because of elizabeth mcgovern going "talamasssca" in the trailers) (mostly liked it altho i didn't really like the protagonist - he thought he was the smartest person in the room and every time he got in over his head, which was pretty much the entire show, women showed up to get him out of trouble)
watched hysteria! (about a high school heavy metal garage band that pretends to be a satanic cult to get fans, and then shit goes off the rails) (it's set in 1987 and got a lot of the satanic panic right but was otherwise only glancingly historical which made me twitch. was fun altho did i mention it went totally off the rails?)
rewatched stranger things s1-s4 with folks on discord in preparation for s5
watched s5 (i have mixed feelings about the season as a whole but i was pretty satisfied with how it ended)

so this news is massachusetts based and one of my friends even works for massdot and DID NOT TELL ME and i had to learn from a snowflake challenge from someone who doesn't even live here and now i share with you the winners of the name-a-snowplow contest. the entries all came from public school classrooms (k-8) and the plows are in service this winter. sleet caroline! clearopathra! you're killing me squalls! read and giggle.

speaking of mass, the boston aquarium built an old folks home for their geriatric penguins. how cute is that?

in the wake of dump and his administration cutting funding to universities mackenzie scott (aka the former mrs jeff bezos) donated $80m to howard university, an hbcu (historically black colleges and universities, for the non-americans in the audience), which is one of the biggest single donations in the school's history. she got billions of dollars when she split from jeff and she's definitely using her powers for good.

i know thanksgiving was last year and these are probably quite sold out but i must share the "no-thanks" jell-o molds. you could get canberry canned cranberry jelly, pecan pie, and brussel sprouts. i don't like brussel sprouts at all but the round little molds are so cute.

joe keery officiated a wedding in his scoops ahoy uniform. for the stranger things fen in the audience. :D

i must share one of the scariest videos i've ever seen - a guy climbing up and then skiing down mt everest with no supplemental oxygen. i'm sorry, but watching him ski down that mountain, especially from the top, is fucking terrifying. i'm not afraid of heights but absolutely not, no way.

sir david attenborough sends a hedgehog on its way. to end with something cute.

dave grohl vs animal drum battle. and something fun. :D

Poem: "Cakes and Ale"

Monday, January 12th, 2026 19:20
ysabetwordsmith: (Fiorenza)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This poem came out of the January 6, 2026 Poetry Fishbowl. It was inspired by prompts from [personal profile] fuzzyred and [personal profile] nsfwords. It also fills the "Cakes and Ale" square in my 1-1-26 card for the Public Domain Day Bingo fest. This poem has been sponsored by [personal profile] janetmiles. It belongs to the series Fiorenza the Wisewoman.

Read more... )

Get Lost, 2025

Tuesday, January 13th, 2026 01:01
[syndicated profile] loweringthebar_feed

Posted by Kevin

LTB logo

Wow, remember when 2024 seemed like a bad year? SeeGoodbye, 2024” (subtitle: “You sucked.”). It wasn’t all bad, because O.J. Simpson died, reportedly from cancer, although cancer claimed it was innocent and has been out looking for the real killer ever since. See O.J. Simpson Embarks on Long, Slow Bronco Ride Into Eternity” (Apr. 12, 2024) (collecting previous references to him). Unfortunately, O.J. didn’t have the decency to die again in 2025, so that year was arguably worse than its predecessor.

And yet somehow, one now longs to have it back.

  • Jan. 7: North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un reportedly declares that trafficking in and/or eating hot dogs will henceforth be considered treason. Too popular in South Korea, you see. Another source claims the dictator’s official jet is code-named “Air Force Un,” which would be funny if true but Kim Jong-un would still be a dick.
  • Jan. 14: An Iowa lawmaker introduces a bill meant to protect Iowans from shark bites, though the only example of a shark biting someone there in recorded history involved an 18-inch-long bamboo shark that bit a local aquarium employee. The bill is quickly tabled, suggesting maybe it was not seen as a priority.
  • Mar. 4: Members of Serbia’s parliament get no jail time for punching each other, or for lighting flares, throwing smoke bombs, and trying to disrupt opposing MPs’ speeches by blowing whistles and vuvuzelas.
  • Mar. 26: The person who used AI to create a video “avatar” to handle an oral argument for him, without first asking the court for permission, quickly learns he will have to handle the argument himself.
  • Apr. 3: CBS News reports the Trump administration has imposed a 10% reciprocal tariff on goods from the Territory of Heard Island and McDonald Islands, which would have upset the territory’s inhabitants if they weren’t all penguins. “Reciprocal,” the president said in his announcement. “That means they do it to us, and we do it to them.” Yep, that’s what that means, but in this case they didn’t and we won’t.
  • Apr. 7: Further shirking its duty, the U.S. Supreme Court denies certiorari in Morford v. Cattelan, thus refusing to decide whether there is a “striking similarity” between an artwork that is a banana duct-taped to a wall and one that is a banana and an orange duct-taped to a wall. Lower courts found no infringement.
  • June 6: Damien Charlotin’s AI Hallucination Database, which collects cases where lawyers have been caught using artificial “intelligence” to write briefs, records its 140th entry. An expert in legal writing and humor is quoted as saying one shouldn’t use AI to write briefs at all, and if one must, one shouldn’t expect it to say things that are true. Seven months later, the database now has 767 entries, so the expert is starting to think one is not listening.
  • June 19: “According to a quick survey of some lawyers and judges,” suggests the Manchester Journal, “the idea of importing actors and providing scripts” for their testimony in a criminal case “appears to be a novel idea.” The defense lawyer learned just before trial that the “witnesses” had responded to a newspaper ad the client placed seeking people to portray witnesses in a “movie,” and wisely chose not to call them to the stand.
  • July 3: Sources report that in the early 1970s, when an aging Justice John Marshall Harlan II was losing his eyesight, but the Court was obliged to review certain adult films in obscenity cases, Harlan’s clerk was forced to describe to him what was happening on the screen. This “often prompt[ed] Harlan to [exclaim] ‘By Jove!’ or ‘extraordinary!’,” according to the report.
  • Aug. 13: A jury in Utah finally gets the chance to convict Nicholas Rossi, or Nicholas Alahverdian, or Arthur Knight, or whoever else he had claimed to be during 17 years on the run. It does.
  • Sept. 8: The CBC reports that a man was arrested for driving a child-size pink Barbie Jeep while under the influence, which is notable partly because it’s not the first time someone’s been arrested for doing that.
  • Sept. 30: In a too-long-delayed ruling, a judge grants Nirvana’s motion for summary judgment, dismissing—and this is still a real thing that happened—child-pornography claims brought against it by the former baby who is shown naked on the cover of the album “Nevermind.”
  • Nov. 6: A jury acquits Sean Charles Dunn, who was—and this is also true—charged with felony assault for throwing a sandwich at a CBP agent. The victim, Gregory Lairmore, claimed the sandwich “exploded” when it struck him in a vulnerable spot (his bulletproof vest). “[I] could smell the onions and the mustard,” he testified, evidently still traumatized. He was lying (at least about the explosion), because the sandwich was still wrapped when it fell to the ground. Still, kudos to him, I guess, for not shooting the guy in the face.
  • Dec. 11: A Louisiana man sues Anne Erin Clark, better known as “St. Vincent,” alleging he was injured by negligent stage-diving and/or crowd-surfing during a show in New Orleans. He alleges Clark seriously injured his spine by leaping onto him and “inexplicably wrapping her arms and legs around him,” though he admits he did not fall down and instead “swayed uncomfortably until event staff could remove Ms. Clark from his torso….”

I wish you the best of luck in 2026.

(no subject)

Monday, January 12th, 2026 16:59
lycomingst: (Default)
[personal profile] lycomingst
Back from the 6 month eye dr visit. Yeah, glaucoma still there, come back in July. Dilated eyes,dilated the hell out of my eyes. Very cautious drive home. The visit seems so far away, and then it's here.

Daily Check-In

Monday, January 12th, 2026 18:00
starwatcher: Western windmill, clouds in background, trees around base. (Default)
[personal profile] starwatcher 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 Monday, January 12, to midnight on Tuesday, January 13. (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #34077 Daily Check-in
This poll is closed.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 25

How are you doing?

I am OK.
16 (64.0%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now.
9 (36.0%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single.
9 (36.0%)

One other person.
11 (44.0%)

More than one other person.
5 (20.0%)




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.
 

Three for the Memories Open Until January 24th

Monday, January 12th, 2026 18:02
yourlibrarian: Taylor and LeBon (OTH-JTSLB-yourlibrarian)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian
1) [community profile] threeforthememories is off to a great start! You have until January 24th to make your own post. I made mine today about my 2025.

2) Speaking of things to rec, saw the film House of Dynamite and thought it was wonderfully done –- except for the ending. Read more... )

I do think that its structure was helpful, given that just 10 minutes in there is a lot starting to go on, and it helped to have it reinforced with repeated elements.

3) Another yes from me was for the series The Beast in Me. This is mostly because I thought it was particularly well done. I'm not a big fan of the murderous husband/neighbor type thriller because they're always guilty and one of my DNW is gaslighting elements. But I thought this was a particularly well developed story and one with less "shocking twist!" than unexpected surprises that relate to character development.

4) The documentary about the making of Frozen 2 was very interesting, and rather surprising, in seeing how Disney approaches making an animated film. I'd think that -- given the costs and enormous amount of labor -- they would have a script nailed down before starting. And not just a draft, but one that had been run past the internal focus groups, had a table reading done by the cast, etc. Instead they scrapped tons of work from animators, some of which took them a year, because they kept veering back and forth on elements of the story, rewriting the central songs, etc. Read more... )

5) The re-release of the Beatles Anthology on Disney+ promised a new episode and remastered footage. It certainly looked very good, but as I'd seen it during its 1990s release, I noticed more about the big gaps in it. Read more... )

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[syndicated profile] fail_feed

Posted by Emma Saven

Now that's blind-siding if I've ever seen it…

And even though this story is set in college, it isn't some tissue-grabbing, Sandra Bullock happy-ending…In fact, this story focuses on the downside of parental gaslighting, rather than the positive cases of parenting!

Having helicopter parents who are obsessed with their kids 'future' can be tough. Despite them often wanting the best for their kids, these types of controlling tendencies can be unhealthy to any parent-child relationship, especially as they get older. It's important for young adults to be able to spread their wings, without having to constantly look back at the nest, to validate that their parents are behind them, clapping at every soar and turn they make.

Yes, you want your parents to support you…And when they are the ones who are technically supporting you financially, it can become difficult to have a say in the boundaries that come with their influence in your decision-making! 

College degrees, boyfriends, jobs…it may all feel like our decision at the time, but is it ever really solely ours

"Stopping the palace evolve"

Tuesday, January 13th, 2026 00:34
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Mark Liberman

P.O. wrote to ask for help in analyzing this phrase from season 2, episode 5 of The Crown:

They're stopping the palace evolve
in keeping with the rest of the world.

The context is

I would recommend getting rid of an entire generation of courtier.
The old school, stuck in the past.
Ostriches with their heads buried in the sand.
They're stopping the palace evolve in keeping with the rest of the world.

In this context, stopping means "not letting", and the phrasing "They're not letting the palace evolve" would have been unproblematic, even for an American like P.O.

There are other examples Out There of "stopping NP V" meaning "not letting NP V", for example:

[link] Pretty sure there was no way of stopping him leave at the time.
[link] Zay is reeling with the thought of being away from those he loves under the scrutiny from whatever, or whomever, it is that’s stopping them escape.
[link] Laugharne pushed hard in both halves, and managed to keep the Quins quiet in the second, stopping them score any more points whilst scoring 44 points.

I'll leave it to our UK readers to explain what the regional, temporal, and sociological associations of this construction are.

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