June 3

Malala Made Me Do It

This is a song from the second series of We Are Lady Parts. I like it a lot. Here's some context in a scene from the show (including a cameo which may surprise you) and some Previously.
posted by Paul Slade at 12:45 PM - 3 comments

A beach on Castro street?

Well, not exactly. For nearly five decades, the corner of Castro and 18th Streets has been an important site for San Francisco’s LGBTQ community: Hibernia Beach. While Hibernia Bank no longer occupies the property at the plaza, the current owners, Bank of America, have learned the significance of the space to the community.
posted by majick at 11:18 AM - 4 comments

The Curious College Career of Benjamin Bolger

The Man Who Couldn't Stop Going to College (SLNYT)
posted by sy at 10:28 AM - 15 comments

exploiting a legal exemption from the 1930 Tariff Act

Nineteen percent of cotton on the U.S. market still sources back to the forced labor heartlands of East Turkestan (Xinjiang), according to a new analysis from Applied DNA of 822 cotton-containing products sampled from February 2023 to March 2024.... More info on enforcing the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, which prohibits the importation of goods produced wholly or in part from the so-called Xinjiang Autonomous Uyghur Region unless it can be proven that they are not the fruits of coerced labor.
posted by spamandkimchi at 8:59 AM - 3 comments

H O N K

We've known about Genyornis newtoni for quite some time. The species, which died out around 45,000 years ago, was first described in 1913. An imposing bird standing up to 2.25 meters (7.4 feet) tall and weighing up to 230 kilograms (510 pounds), Genyornis newtoni would have been a formidable presence in the grassland habitats it preferred across a vast swathe of the Australian continent. But a new discovery suggests that we may have misinterpreted the bird.
posted by Aya Hirano on the Astral Plane at 8:23 AM - 10 comments

How to Bake a Potato

After yesterday's rosin-fest, I thought it would be useful and uncontroversial to post definitive information about how* to bake a potato. [more inside]
posted by cupcakeninja at 5:51 AM - 36 comments

The Little Free Thread Library

Spending the last couple of weekends late spring cleaning required confronting the dozens of books I've held onto over the years, jammed on dusty shelves and closet boxes, with the oldest dating all the way back to summer reading favorites from grade school. Some of these I keep not so much because I love the story itself (I'm a big fan of ebooks and have most of my reading history digitized), but because the book as an object holds special meaning. Do you have any physical books you keep around more for the memento libri than for the text inside? Tell us about them (or anything else) in our weekly Free Thread!
posted by Rhaomi at 5:29 AM - 93 comments

Sending goods by train has a much lower carbon footprint

Transporting billions of tonnes of freight generates huge emissions. What if it was moved by rail not road? About 4 billion tonnes of goods are delivered across Australia each year, mostly by road, but one train can carry the same freight as 54 trucks. So why doesn't more freight go by rail?
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 5:28 AM - 23 comments

Quine Clock

Quine Clock – code that displays itself as a digital clock.
posted by Wolfdog at 3:54 AM - 18 comments

South African election results. What happens next?

South African election results. What happens next? For the first time since the end of apartheid in 1994, the once-dominant party will need to make a deal with other parties to form a coalition government. [more inside]
posted by Zumbador at 1:02 AM - 7 comments

"My 94-year-old grandmother has kept a list of every book she ever read"

Ben Myers posted to X last year about his grandmother's reading list, and followed it up a year later after her death. This My Modern Met article summarises the tweets.
posted by paduasoy at 12:41 AM - 12 comments

The 101st most successful music act of all time

Since then, the myth of Nickelback's awfulness has only grown through gifs, worst-of polls, clickbait articles, comedian punchlines, and YouTube mashups. But why is Nickelback the internet's punching bag of choice, and what seeded this collective animosity? Is there a quantifiable explanation for all of this Nickelback hatred? from Why Do People Hate Nickelback So Much? A Statistical Analysis [Stat Significant]
posted by chavenet at 12:14 AM - 61 comments

June 2

Mario is the Maître d'

Copacabana Dollmation [3m50s] is THAT song with a video made with stop motion dolls. That is what it is.
posted by hippybear at 6:50 PM - 19 comments

This May Be the Oldest Known Neanderthal Art

This 130,000 Year Old Decorative Bear Bone May Be the Oldest Known Neanderthal Art. Researchers say the carved artifact was not a utilitarian item and instead served a symbolic purpose.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 5:42 PM - 14 comments

Together!

In 1994 the Pet Shop Boys were invited to perform 'Go West' at the Brit Awards. They agreed and brought with them 3 separate choirs of miners. Some of those miners had marched with the gay and lesbian members of LGSM in the 1980s. It is one of the great, near-lost music moments [Vimeo, via John Bull, via MetaFilter's own JScalzi]
posted by chavenet at 1:05 PM - 39 comments

“clientelism is the main organizing force within Hobbit politics”

The Moral Economy of the Shire is an analysis by Nathan Goldwag of how hobbit society is structured in Middle Earth, explaining what models Tolkien drew on, and how its shown in the books. This is one of a series of posts about Tolkien’s works, which range from an alternate history of a victorious Sauron to a consideration of whether dwarves are analogous to Jews and the metafictional nature of Lord of the Rings.
posted by Kattullus at 11:25 AM - 46 comments

Yes, it runs Spacewar!

“CuriousMarc” talks to Oscar Vermeulen about his scale replica of the PDP-10, the MIT AI Lab, and the Incompatible Timesharing System. [more inside]
posted by ChurchHatesTucker at 9:55 AM - 14 comments

The most intense potato flavor you've ever experienced.

Rosin is highly flammable, and its fumes are noxious. So what better way to cook a potato? Boiling potatoes in molten rosin - a byproduct of pine sap distillation - seals in the flavor. "You get the most intense potato flavor you've ever experienced." If you're not up for boiling rosin yourself (Joy of Cooking, probably wisely, removed its recipe in the '98 edition), head to the Catface Country Turpentine Festival in Portal, Georgia, a "Rockwellian small-town festival replete with event-themed floats and beauty queens". (Catface refers to the scars left behind by the extraction of resin.) Alternatively, you can hop in your DeLorean and head to Cracker Barrel, which served rosin potatoes in the 80s. Or Doctor Potato (not a real doctor, but a team of potato experts) notes you could try coating your spud in a jacket of salt and egg. Previously...
posted by dmd at 8:17 AM - 56 comments

The Literature of Change

New Scientist writers pick their favourite science fiction books of all time - some classics, some obvious modern picks, and some genuine surprises.
posted by Artw at 8:16 AM - 24 comments

What one man learned living alone in the wilderness for 40 years

In his memoir, “The Way of the Hermit,” Ken Smith dispels myths about the solitary life off the grid. Review by Laurie Hertzel The first half of this book is a rip-roaring read, filled with death-defying adventures — fighting off grizzly bears; avoiding a charging bull moose; nearly freezing in an ice-encrusted tent. Smith falls into a raging river, loses his supply pack and nearly drowns. Still, he loved it all: “It was intoxicating, invigorating, and utterly liberating.”
posted by bq at 8:14 AM - 12 comments

Ellis Island 1974 and now

As teenagers in 1974 Phil Buehler and Steve Siegel rowed out to explore the ruins of Ellis Island. They made a film (NY Times gift link), one of the first picks for the NY Times OpDocs “Encore” series. The filmmaker-photographers reflect on the symbolic power of Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty, as they revisit the ruins that remain and the restored main Registry hall that now draws millions of tourists a year. [more inside]
posted by ShooBoo at 7:21 AM - 1 comment

The sex worker who fought debanking and got his EFTPOS machine back

The sex worker who fought debanking and got his EFTPOS (Electronic Funds Transfer At Point Of Sale) machine back. Sex workers can now fight debanking in some parts of Australia, but others are left hiding their jobs and battling financial discrimination.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 7:08 AM - 3 comments

Mockumentary? Documentary? Ren Faire.

Who will claim the king’s throne? RenFaireHBO, a 3-part HBO Original Documentary Series which chronicles a fantastic and farcical succession battle of Shakespearean proportions at the Texas Renaissance Festival, premieres June 2 TRAILER [SLYT] (Warning: language.)
posted by Glinn at 7:00 AM - 20 comments

Transformative!!!!

The Hollywood Reporter's Full Comedy Actress Roundtable: Maya Rudolph, Kristen Wiig, Quinta Brunson, Michelle Buteau and More [Ego Nwodim, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Lacey Rose (host) 55m] is full of mutal support, deep sharing, and honest stories that you don't expect from this kind of round table. However, the women are usually like this, and they are always my favorites.
posted by hippybear at 6:05 AM - 2 comments

At What Distance Can the Human Eye Detect a Candle Flame?

"Nevertheless, we have shown that a candle flame at roughly 2.6 km would have an apparent brightness comparable to a 6th magnitude star. Could the keenest human eyes on the planet see a candle flame at 10 miles? We have provided strong evidence that the answer is No, for it would be as faint as a star of apparent magnitude 10, and that would require a pair of 7 X 50 binoculars mounted on a tripod, even for experienced observers with good night vision." [more inside]
posted by cupcakeninja at 5:30 AM - 9 comments

Wait for it ...

Before you go "Aw, this is programmer b***s***!" and huck (maybe "huque" if you're Canadian) (or French) your laptop out the window, just hang on. TLDR: Python Notebooks for Fundamentals of Music Processing [more inside]
posted by JustSayNoDawg at 5:09 AM - 12 comments

Two layers of how-the-sausage-is-made

Earlier this week, a giant dump of Google documents revealed how the search advertising seller linked up adverts bought to pages they're on; then Wired published an excerpt from a book explaing the link between the advertising auctions and the disinformation sites taking money to display those adverts: How Advertising Funds Disinformation (archive). [more inside]
posted by k3ninho at 3:49 AM - 10 comments

Witness what the gods do…after dark.

Lore Olympus, the biggest name in WEBTOON's catalog, has come to an end after 280 installments since beginning six years ago. It retold the story of Hades and Persephone, with subplots of every other Greek myth you can think of, and won the Eisner, Harvey, and Ringo awards multiple times. Also available in print at your local library or comic book store.
posted by one for the books at 2:55 AM - 5 comments

Hot or Not?

Can you reach net zero by 2050? Play the Climate game by the Financial Times
posted by chavenet at 2:02 AM - 17 comments

June 1

A Quarter Century on the High Seas

At the end of the nineties, technology and the Internet were a playground for young engineers and ‘hackers’. Some of them regularly gathered in the w00w00 IRC chatroom on the EFnet network. This tech-think-tank had many notable members, including WhatsApp founder Jan Koum and Shawn Fanning, who logged on with the nickname Napster. In 1998, 17-year-old Fanning shared an idea with the group. ‘Napster’ wanted to create a network of computers that could share files with each other. More specifically, a central music database that everyone in the world could access. This idea never left the mind of the young developer. Fanning stopped going to school and flanked by his friend Sean Parker, devoted the following months to making his vision a reality. That moment came on June 1, 1999, when the first public release of Napster was released online. Soon after, the software went viral.
Napster Sparked a File-Sharing Revolution 25 Years Ago [TorrentFreak] [more inside]
posted by Rhaomi at 9:59 PM - 34 comments

Justice League

Major League Baseball has incorporated the statistics of former Negro Leagues players into its historical records on its website, meaning legendary leaders in some categories like Babe Ruth and Ty Cobb have now been replaced in the record books by players who were not allowed to play on the same fields as them during segregation. Josh Gibson, one of the greatest sluggers in the history of the Negro Leagues, is now listed as MLB’s new all-time career leader in batting average at .372, moving ahead of Ty Cobb at .367. The MLB website shows Gibson also overtaking Babe Ruth in career slugging percentage. [more inside]
posted by chavenet at 11:59 AM - 28 comments

The RPG Campaign That Became A Novel

Many authors have written stories or novels inspired by RPG campaigns. There is debate about whether or not tabletop RPGs should be used as writing tools. Plenty of folks give the idea a thumbs-down, but save some room in your heart for the LitRPG. B&N has you covered with, of course, a list of novels that started life as RPGs. [more inside]
posted by cupcakeninja at 11:55 AM - 50 comments

I just crossed the barrier. I'm not afraid anything!

This is the story of how a low-budget Australian film – The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert – changed the course of history, loudly and proudly bringing a celebration of gay culture to the world that continues to resonate 20 years on. Narrated by Terence Stamp, Between a Frock and a Hard Place [57m] is also a social history of gay culture in Australia, drawing on footage from the famous movie as well as Sydney in the 80s. [more inside]
posted by hippybear at 8:48 AM - 14 comments

Little marsupial is now thriving in a remote desert safe haven

Once extinct in central Australia, this little kangaroo-looking marsupial is now thriving in a remote desert safe haven. The number of brush-tailed bettongs and burrowing bettongs surveyed at Newhaven Wildlife Sanctuary in central Australia has nearly doubled since last year.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 6:42 AM - 8 comments

Monotropism: single attention and associated cognition in autism

“Me and monotropism : a unified theory of autism,” suggests that attentional differences explain not only the diagnostic criteria for autism, but better yet, they explain the internal phenomenology: inertia, sensory and social overload and insensitivity, stimming, and particularly hyperfocus and intense interest.

Test yourself here.
posted by anotherpanacea at 5:52 AM - 125 comments

mirror in the bathroom

This gown, from one of Kahlo’s long hospital stays, is stained with both paint and [content note:] blood. It is a garment that portrays a very different image than the technicolor Tehuantepec dresses that were the artist’s signature style in public. [getty.edu] [more inside]
posted by HearHere at 5:46 AM - 3 comments

The Cassandra of American intelligence

Intelligence analysis is a notoriously difficult craft. Practitioners have to make predictions and assessments with limited information, under huge time pressure, on issues where the stakes involve millions of lives and the fates of nations. If this small bureau tucked in the State Department’s Foggy Bottom headquarters has figured out some tricks for doing it better, those insights may not just matter for intelligence, but for any job that requires making hard decisions under uncertainty. from The obscure federal intelligence bureau that got Vietnam, Iraq, and Ukraine right [Vox]
posted by chavenet at 12:53 AM - 19 comments

May 31

aposiopesis

Watch how this twelve year old wins the $50,000 2024 US National Spelling Bee by correctly spelling, among many other insanely difficult words, ‘aposiopesis’. When they interview his father he says, ‘I have no words’ but then, instead of an ellipsis or an em-dash, produces a veritable flood of them.
posted by toycamera at 10:10 PM - 12 comments

🆆🅴🅻🅲🅾🅼🅴...🆃🅾...🆃🅷🅴 🅼🅰🅲🅷🅸🅽🅴

"Machinery will tend to lose its sensational glamour and appear in its true subsidiary order in human life as use and continual poetical allusion subdue its novelty. For, contrary to general prejudice, the wonderment experienced in watching nose dives is of less immediate creative promise to poetry than the familiar gesture of a motorist in the modest act of shifting gears." 'Hart Crane and the Machine Age'. 1933.
posted by clavdivs at 7:05 PM - 7 comments

Extinct mountain jewel plant returned to wild in secret location

Extinct mountain jewel plant returned to wild in secret location. (BBC) A plant picked for its beautiful flowers then wiped out in the UK mainland makes a return.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 7:03 PM - 7 comments

The number of women murdered by partners also went down

States that passed unilateral divorce laws saw total female suicide decline by around 20 percent in the long run. Study.
posted by clawsoon at 3:37 PM - 15 comments

“Both of them knew that the time garden was dying.”

The Garden of Time is a 1962 short story by J. G. Ballard [archive] which was the theme of this year’s Met Gala. Partly because of that incongruous fact, Thomas Jones, who wrote about Ballard back in 2008 [archive], and Edmund Gordon, whose piece on Ballard appeared last week [archive], had a discussion about Ballard on the London Review of Books podcast.
posted by Kattullus at 2:22 PM - 16 comments

The Beat Generation

US District Judge permits copyright suit to continue in the case that alleges the beat that largely defines the Raggaeton genre has been used by 100s in infringement of copyright.
posted by rubatan at 1:00 PM - 17 comments

At the whim of 'brain one'

given the current discussions around ai and its impact on artistry and authorship, creating a film reliant on the technology is a controversial but inevitable move. however, the software that hustwit and dawes have built may just hit the sweet spot where human meets machine; where the algorithm works to respect the material and facilitate an artistic vision. from B–1 and the first generative feature film. [more inside]
posted by chavenet at 12:33 PM - 9 comments

A blueprint for how Google organizes everything on the web

Leaked Documents Reveal How Google Search Gatekeeps the Internet This week, a 2,500-page leak, first reported by search engine optimization (SEO) veteran Rand Fishkin, gave the world an insight into the 26-year-old mystery of Google Search.
posted by heyitsgogi at 11:43 AM - 28 comments

Fish are smarter than we think

One of those rare videos from The Dodo that isn't unapologetically sappy. This one is more Far Side, I think. Watch This Fish "Drive" To His Mom To Get Treats [3m] is about university researchers who have set goldfish free to drive on land.
posted by hippybear at 11:39 AM - 13 comments

Something very near my heart

In the summer of 2023, Ursula Vernon (aka T. Kingfisher, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously) was diagnosed with breast cancer. Thus began The Saga of Cancer Bob. [more inside]
posted by cosmic owl at 11:15 AM - 6 comments

Yes, they wood build a satellite out of that material

Magnolia wood is great for building, as it resists splitting and glues well. It's so good that Japan built the LignoSat probe out of the wood, which will be better for Earth when the satellite inevitably reenters the atmosphere.
posted by Brandon Blatcher at 9:12 AM - 36 comments

Basically the fetish equivalent of proclaiming “I love vanilla lattes”

Could my desire to be rag-dolled by a big, strong man be a symptom of some sort of patriarchal Disney brain virus contracted during childhood? Do I want to be romantically rescued by a man? Saved by love? Yeah, unfortunately. Like honestly, that sounds fucking great. Is that gross? Sure. Okay, let’s sit with that for a minute. It’s not like I want to be a trad wife or anything, but there’s a reason a bunch 20-something TikTokers are singing the virtues of baking all day. Life is hard. Jobs are hard. I could never give up my sense of self-worth for the trade-off of being a large adult dependent, but maybe that’s what the fantasy is really about — having a brief moment where someone else is responsible for me again. from Pick Me Up by Lauren Bans [The Cut; ungated] [via The Morning News]
posted by chavenet at 1:32 AM - 57 comments

Thoreau'd not traveled by

They were Black veterans of World War II and Korea who had fought for freedoms abroad that they were denied at home. They were champions for LGBTQ rights at a time when each of those initials stood for moral corruption and political subversion. They were feminist activists in the left wing, some in the U.S. Communist Party, who confronted sexism, racism, and class prejudice as inseparable wrongs and barriers to solidarity, which prepared the way for a feminism beyond the Second Wave. And there were scientists prepared to denounce their colleagues’ ingenious new biological, chemical, and military technologies as potential threats to the natural world, including humanity itself. [James R. Gaines, The Fifties] [more inside]
posted by HearHere at 1:06 AM - 4 comments

« Older posts