Thor #277

Jul. 3rd, 2025 10:30 am
iamrman: (Lady Loki)
[personal profile] iamrman posting in [community profile] scans_daily

Writer: Roy Thomas

Pencils: John Buscema

Inks: Tom Palmer


Loki is punished for his part in the death of Balder.


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My alt-Mummy film

Jul. 2nd, 2025 11:51 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
The inspiration being the 1999 Mummy movie is not without problematic elements.

Imagine an Egyptian film company wanting to make a movie about idiots waking a horror in Canada that only the Egyptian lead can resolve.
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Wimsey Quote Database

Jul. 2nd, 2025 08:22 pm
beatrice_otter: Me in red--face not shown (Default)
[personal profile] beatrice_otter
The hardest thing about writing Peter Wimsey fanfic is the quotes. Peter Wimsey and Harriet Vane have an encyclopedic knowledge of the literature of their era (and the literature that was considered classic/important in that era), and quote it often.

Today I posted on the Gaud Squad Discord that it would be awesome if we had a searchable database of the literature and poetry that they knew or could reasonably be expected to know, searchable by keyword and theme, so that one could look things up easily. And that I would be willing to do the data entry, but had not the technical skills to set it up.
supertailz responded by setting up a Notion instance and is noodling around with the technical aspects of it, so it looks like this is happening!

The easy part is getting the literature that Peter and Harriet quote added--all I have to do is read through the books (no hardship there!) and source the quotations. Although I know there are some annotated versions floating around, and if anyone has a copy of the annotations, that would be lovely.

The hard part is getting the right mix of things that Peter and Harriet would have known. Because what is considered "classic literature" changes over time. Some things rise in acclaim, some things fall out of favor. What would be really handy is a curriculum for Eton ca. 1900 and for Oxford ca. 1910, but so far I haven't found anything. Does anybody know how to search "what literary works were considered classics in 1920"? Or have a good list of where to start?
johnpalmer: (Default)
[personal profile] johnpalmer
Hey, folks.

I've finally had the overall desperation, that I've asked about witness statements we could collect - we, being my attorney and I.

I tried to write a powerful personal statement, saying "doctors, and lawyers, will read this, and each went to school to turn their mind into something special - they were a competent doctor or lawyer. And y'all wouldn't last a year, with what I have to deal with. Think of the humiliation, that I can barely care for myself, after having been a big fish, in my own tiny pool."

So there are things that someone could write about.
"I knew John, before 2010, and after 2010, and he's completely different," is good.
"John has an amazing brain AND
...I can only imagine how bad it is, to have lost that."
OR
...I can attest that he's sometimes just not the John I know."

That's good.

One doctor thought I was having a psychotic break, and cited, as evidence, that I said "Barnstead is a friend of spiders." If you were writing something else for me, and wanted to point out that "John Barnstead is a real person, and so is scifi author Spider Robinson, so saying one is the friend of the other is perfectly reasonable!" that wouldn't be bad.

Um. If I've ever reached out to you, and sounded crazy, but, in a relatively short order (but maybe a day or two), seemed not crazy - or, at least more stable, or more coherent, or whatever, that's good.

If you can say you've seen me have struggles with mental challenges you know I could handle, or, you've heard me talk about them, that's something you can report. If ten people say "he always talked about being so *tired* all the time," that's not proof I was tired, but it does mean I talked about it a whole lot.

If you've seen me have physical struggles, that's fine too. Have you ever seen me break into a huge sweat, like, I'll drench my t-shirt, wring sweat out of it? That's fine. Ever seen me spacy? That's great.

The reason I'm saying I'm disabled is, my neuro pain keeps scrambling my brain so much that I'm not just too tired, I'm no longer even *competent* to do my job, and I'm in too much pain to push a broom. So, any time where you've seen my brain falter badly, and you really wondered "how could he be that *stupid*?" well - if you can make that a fact based thing, "I saw him do X, which he wouldn't do normally, unless, as he says, his brain was misfiring. Because later, he could explain why X was so stupid...."

The timeline is short - my application is going in, in under a week.

Bill Gawne, I wish I could do more than just shout out to you, while I'm under this much stress, but I know you've seen me semi-crazy, then more rational, and, I know you can back me on Barnstead/Spider. I miss the hell out of you; you're one of the reasons the broken brain *hurts*, emotionally speaking (in addition to the neuro pain). Griffen, you too, m'friend. Too many others I can't think to name, or, if I start naming, I'll forget someone.

Thanks for being there if you can't help, and thanks for any help you can give.

phone case update

Jul. 2nd, 2025 10:26 pm
archersangel: the first of the flock (dreamsheep)
[personal profile] archersangel
a follow-up to the previous post.

the case arrived a few days ago & the rubber-ish piece was removed. of course the cover over the charging port tore completely on one side as i was removing it.

it looks like this is a darker black than my brother's case. but then, his has about 2 /12 years of wear and exposure to the sun.

the back rubber-ish piece and the light gray hard inner piece look nice together. otterbox should offer it as a color choice. and i could get a cut of sales if they do for suggesting the idea.
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

When I was a wee lad and went to bible school each week, I had a hard time comprehending just whom were all of those epistles in the New Testament addressed to.  Of course, there are many other books in the New Testament, a total of 27, but the ones that intrigued me most were the 9 Pauline letters to Christian churches that we refer to as "epistles".  I was most captivated by these 9 books and I wanted to know what kind of people they were, what their communities were like, what their ethnicities were, and, above all, even way back then, what languages they spoke.

These communities were called:

Romans
Corinthians — Paul wrote two epistles to them
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
Thessalonians — Paul also wrote two epistles to them

I knew who the Romans were, and what language they spoke, so no problem there.  Moreover, I was aware from a sense of architectural history that a Corinthian capital column was a Greek creation.  Several of the others had a Greek ring to them as well.  But the one that attracted my attention above all the others was the letter to the Galatians, who were located in a region of Anatolia known as Galatia.  Somehow Galatians didn't seem to fit the Mediterranean paradigm that I suspected for the other communities.

Only much later did I learn that the Galatians were a type of Gauls, i.e., Celts, who had migrated from what is now France to what is now Türkiye.  What, pray tell, would have driven them there so far from the north to the south, when most population movements during the Holocene Epoch (last ten thousand years) generally were from south to north?

The Gauls and their confrères were outstanding miners.  They mined a variety of minerals, including gold, iron, and tin.  The latter was important in its own right, but also for alloying with copper to produce bronze, the metallurgy of which the Celts were renowned for.  Above all, however, the Celts / Gauls were masters of saltmining, which is reflected in these toponyms:  Hallstatt, Hallein, Halle, G(h)alich.

Even today, though, when I think of Celts, a bucolic picture of shepherds with their flocks comes to mind, and it's not difficult to imagine that, just as the Celts went wandering in search of metal sources, so they were ever in quest of better pastures for their sheep.

It is no wonder that, being the skillful shepherds that they were, the Celts would become the premier wool weavers we know them to be.  It just so happens that one of the textile types they perfected was diagonal twill.  If you add some colored thread into the warp and the weft in a repeated pattern, you get plaid, beloved of the Gaelic Scots still to this day. It is not an accident that the earliest and best preserved plaids in the world are found in the salt mines of the Celtic areas of Europe, as well as in the bogs of northern Europe, whose tannin preserves organic materials, including plaids and other woolen textiles (not to mention human bodies!).  The only other place on earth I know of for the early conservation of woolen textiles, including very early plaids from the same period as those in the northern European bogs and Celtic salt mines of north central Europe, is the Tarim Basin, especially Qizilchoqa (near Qumul [Hami]) and Zaghunluq (near Chärchän [Qiemo]). both of which have highly saline soils and exquisite Bronze Age woolen textiles, including plaids.  I have tasted the deposits exposed in a tunnel 400 meters down at Hallstatt and from the tableland where Ur-David (Chärchän Man) was discovered.  You can use them as table salt to flavor your food.

The Celts / Gauls certainly had a wanderlust, and that would explain what brought them to Anatolia — and other far-flung places.

 

Selected readings

[Thanks to Elizabeth J. W. Barber, J. P. Mallory, and Douglas Q. Adams]

Daily Check-in

Jul. 2nd, 2025 06:02 pm
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 Wednesday, July 2, to midnight on Thursday, July 3. (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #33319 Daily Check-in
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 21

How are you doing?

I am OK.
12 (57.1%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now.
9 (42.9%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single.
7 (33.3%)

One other person.
9 (42.9%)

More than one other person.
5 (23.8%)




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.
 

Sunshine Revival Challenge #1

Jul. 2nd, 2025 06:54 pm
alexcat: (Default)
[personal profile] alexcat
Challenge #1

Journaling Prompt: Light up your journal with activity this month. Talk about your goals for July or for the second half of 2025.
Creative Prompt: Shine a light on your own creativity. Create anything you want (an image, an icon, a story, a poem, or a craft) and share it with your community.. 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.



Goals? Oh my! I think I might have given goals some time back. These days, just getting thour8gh the day is good. Living in t****'s America is draining. I would love to get back into writing. It does help with all that existential dread and angst I feel these days. My favorite Big Bang canceled this year. Maybe I'll hunt another one. Anyhow, my rest of the year goals and July goals are to do more fandom things.


I made this:
malada: Canadian flag text I stand with Canada (Default)
[personal profile] malada
I mean, look at Jeff Bezos He didn't just get a yacht, he got a super yacht and replace it with a mega super monster yacht. Dude, what are you compensating for?

And he basically wanted to rent the best parts of Venice for his wedding? Seriously? Shouldn't you be doing something productive like with all that money like, oh FIXING YOUR FARKING ROCKET? Your little hopper rocket is cute and everything but how about something that can get to orbit and deliver your stupid satellites? Haw about PAYING PEOPLE A LIVING WAGE? A private plane I can understand: he's a business man with far flung holdings. Fast transportation without having to mingle with the dirty masses that feed your empire probably counts for something.

How many houses does he own? A Google search shows he has for a half a BILLION dollars in real estate! Five New York City apartments,two homes in D.C., three mansions in Beverly Hills, a ranch near his launch site (at least that makes sense) and probably more. WTF? How much time does he actually spend in each one? Does he even know the layout of each one? He probably needs a GPS unit to find the bathroom each time he moves. From what I understand, hoarders tend to collect stuff that *might* be usable or fixable but they never have time to mess with any of that because they're busy collecting more stuff! Now I'm sure that all of Bezos' homes, offices, yachts and other items are useful but does he actually realize how much he has? Hoarders tend to forget until it's clean up time then everything is Important and Valuable and they Must Keep It.

When does the impulse to have MOAR and MOAR stop from being simple greed to a mental illness?

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