Excised video for Wicked Day post

Oct. 30th, 2025 08:29 pm
neonvincent: From an icon made by the artists themselves (Bang)
[personal profile] neonvincent
I changed the subject from Midwestern marching bands to Big 'Ten' marching bands play 'Wicked' for National Wicked Day, so I cut out Missouri because it's not a Big Ten school but U$C is.

Jenn's been playing Cult of the Lamb

Oct. 29th, 2025 03:29 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
and omg those cultists are so needy. They can't feed themselves, so you're constantly trying to keep them in berries and fish, and they complain about everything!

"There's no place to poop, build an outhouse!" (You're an animal, poop on the ground!)

"I want to eat a poop sandwich!" (Uh, okay, but why do I have to make it!?)

"Oh, that grass gruel made me sick!" (Get back to work!)

"I'm sick of your lies!" (Welp, time to perform another human sapient sacrifice of a, uh, willing victim!)

Seriously, who's running this cult, you or them?

*****************************


Read more... )
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
A Good Impression
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 2 of 2, complete
Word count (story only): 1214
[Thursday, December 15, 2016, barely past seven in the morning]


Back to part one
To the City Engines Index
:: Thanks for reading! ::


:: This story was written for the October of 2025 Magpie Monday, from a prompt by [personal profile] readera. Rather than wait for sponsorship, I am posting it in two parts (on two days), to keep from making the timeline any more tangled. Thank you to the wonderful Readera for the idea, and I hope readers enjoy the story as much as I did while writing it! Part of the City Engines stories in Mercedes, in the Polychrome Heroics universe::




Frank the Crank pursed his lips. “Why are you underselling yourself again?”

Lautaro laughed, his voice rolling in warm rumbles. “Did you ever see the movie ‘The Wizard of Oz’? Remember the line ‘Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain?” He set his mug on the counter and crossed his arms, but that only made him seem larger and more solid with no trace of threat. “As I understand it, my job is to be your curtain.”

Tension pulled Frank’s eyebrows down into a knotted snarl. “I don’t like all of this misdirection.”
Read more... )

Problems for tomorrow

Oct. 30th, 2025 07:20 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

You ever look at all the tabs open on your work computer as you turn it off and think man, that's so much garbage that Tomorrow Me has to sort out, that poor guy, he's gonna hate me?

Had a kinda disappointing day at work today. I didn't get enough done, and next week is going to be busy so I really can't afford to do so little.

rionaleonhart: kingdom hearts: sora, riku and kairi having a friendly chat. (and they returned home)
[personal profile] rionaleonhart
I find it really hard to write Strohl/Will fanfiction because they are too goddamn cute. This isn't my territory! Can't you guys be a little more messed up so I know how to write you?


Title: Quiet Moments
Fandom: Metaphor: ReFantazio
Rating: G
Pairing: Strohl/protagonist
Wordcount: 1,300
Summary: Will and Strohl have a late-night conversation aboard the gauntlet runner.


Quiet Moments )

Thankful Thursday

Oct. 30th, 2025 07:18 pm
mdlbear: Wild turkey hen close-up (turkey)
[personal profile] mdlbear

Today I am thankful for...

  • The return (yesterday) of my housemates. In large part because I am back to taking care of two cats in one room, rather than four cats in three rooms on two floors.
  • Dishwashers. I don't think I've ever mentioned dishwashers, but they are certainly worthty of gratitude.
  • Along those lines, having a clothes washer and dryer that I can get to without having to leave the house/apartment/wherever-I'm-living.
  • My trusty Edirol UA-25 audio interface. NO thanks to the flaky USB connector on my laptop.
  • Finding out that the biopsies taken at my gastroscopy all came out normal. They checked for several things which I don't have to worry about now.

Shutdown Teardown

Oct. 30th, 2025 12:41 pm
l33tminion: (Default)
[personal profile] l33tminion
Yeah, the White House probably does need more event space. But if Biden or Obama's approach to that problem was to bypass all process and demolish an entire wing during a government shutdown as quickly as possible so as to present it as a fait accompli? The Republican reaction to that would definitely not be calm. And it's incredibly naive to think either the ballroom will be paid for entirely by donations or that the all donations nominally for the ballroom will go to that project, given the history of how responsibly Trump-affiliated nonprofits manage their donations.

Trump is also trying to get the DOJ to pay him $230M in recompense for prosecuting him for his obvious and egregious crimes. This includes asking for actual damages for legal fees he never paid and punitive damages which the law bars paying. The decisions on all of this will be made by people who were Trump's personal lawyers, including those defending him in these specific cases. This by itself seems a wild scandal, but it's just another day in (what's left of) the Trump White House.

There's also been talk about the supposed necessity of a third Trump term, term limits be damned. Of course this is trolling, but this is an administration that governs through trolling, stupidity of the plan (as after the 2020 election) is no barrier to the existence or seriousness of the attempt. Personally, I'll bite the bullet on the (admittedly still too contingent) prediction: If Trump isn't dead or something, they'll try the straightforward plan of just running and winning the Republican primary. And in that case, I think SCOTUS would say on 1st Amendment grounds, political parties can put forward the candidates they want, however foolishly (after all, eligibility rules theoretically could be changed, no matter how much a constitutional amendment is definitely not actually happening). And if he wins, will they want to rule in a way that amounts to "the Republican can't win"? I'd guess it would come down to some combination of "whether he's 'obviously ineligible' is a non-justiciable political question", "that's the responsibility of the Electoral College", and "the mechanism is impeachment". Of course, that would also require Trump to actually win, or for one of his alternative slate of plans to actually succeed.

Trump's also ordered the military to restart nuclear weapons testing. Don't know where to begin with that. Seems insane.

The Fairy of Ku-She by M. Lucie Chin

Oct. 30th, 2025 08:49 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


A fairy's efforts to recover stolen arcane tools via illicit means produce spectacular calamity.

The Fairy of Ku-She by M. Lucie Chin

The Accessibility Nails Collection

Oct. 29th, 2025 09:39 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

Somebody had brought their not-really-wanted nail polish to the queer social event I was at last night, encouraging people to use or take home anything they liked.

And just because I was sitting at the table near them for a while without much to do, and because I like bright colors, I ended up painting my nails. Bright yellow. (I was drawn to it because it looked like a fluorescent hi-vis yellow in the bottle. Once it was on it's "just" a nice bright primary yellow (someone else looked at it on me and said "I wore that color for a Simpsons drag show once," to give you an idea of what yellow it is), but that's still good.

I used to love nail polish, that and really chunky colorful jewelry were the only "girly" things I ever got excited about. And even then, my mom was always trying to steer me toward soft pinks and stuff and I chose more blue and green and the most "unnatural" colors.

But I haven't done my nails since before I left my old house. I was...busy, and then for a long time it felt too femme, like I struggled so much to get people to stop misgendering me, I didn't want to make that any more likely. And by the time that stopped being a concern I was well and truly out of the habit and all my nail polish that hasn't been touched in five or six years should probably be thrown away.

But here I did my nails very happily. It was nice that it didn't feel weird or feminine at all now. It just felt queer.

Also while making dinner tonight, I realized that when I'm chopping vegetables it's way easier to tell where my fingers end and the peppers or whatever begin if the ends of my fingers are bright yellow.

Not that I usually struggle with this, I'm used to doing it mostly by feel. It was weird that my eyes could help out!

That got me thinking about starting to acquire new nail polish (the old stuff I have needs to be thrown out really) based on what colors are easy for me to pick up!

The yellow has already half chipped off, so I'll have to see if there's any nail polish remover in the house that works! But this probably won't be the last time I paint my nails.

conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
This is the first thing
I have understood:
Time is the echo of an axe
Within a wood.


**********


Link

It's that awful time of month again.

Oct. 27th, 2025 12:10 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Boo.

(Wait, and also nearly Halloween! Boo!)

************


Read more... )

Autumn and...another year goes by....

Oct. 29th, 2025 09:00 pm
jreynoldsward: (Default)
[personal profile] jreynoldsward

It’s a labored truism that after you’ve lived a certain number of years, time seems to speed up rather than slow down (mileage varies as to when that happens for each individual). Certainly, autumn seemed to sneak up on us this year, in part due to higher daytime temperatures. It doesn’t seem like it was that many days ago that I was still wearing T-shirts and no base layers to ride Marker. Now…while it’s the lightweight base layers, it’s still the beginning of five-six months with some sort of base layer underneath, sweater or sweatshirt on top.

Time passes, nonetheless. It’s weird to think that the husband and I are now in our eleventh year in retirement. Neither one of us really thought that we’d be living this life at this age—that was not the case for our parents. Medical advances, different jobs, not going through a world war makes a difference. That said, I know darned good and well I couldn’t keep up the pace of my younger years. Oh, the sustained effort can happen over a couple of days—and then I’m done. Not that I’m a lazybones or anything, it’s just—I get tired. The arthritis calls my name. And so on.

Part of this life is getting out into the forest to cut firewood. Yesterday, we went out for what might be the last load of this year. The chainsaw is complaining about eleven years of use, even with diligent maintenance, and while we might get one more session out of it, we might not, either. There was two inches of snow in our preferred cutting area, and the first of two controlled bull elk hunting seasons started today. We might get out again for woodcutting this year, or we might not. It all depends on our ambition and the weather.

In any case, for us, the wood harvest in fall is more about building a stockpile for next winter, not this winter. At some point we’ll stop getting out there because we’re just too old and tired for woodcutting.

Yesterday, however, was not that day. Even though we couldn’t find the one lodgepole pine we spotted at the end of our last cutting that would have made the perfect start for a big load, we still managed to find some good stuff. Nice lodgepole with pitch pockets that are good for starting fires; not so much white/grand fir. It was harder to see the good stuff on the ground because of the snow, but on the other hand, it was also easier to spot standing dead trees that we had overlooked before.

Fall is often a lot nicer for woodcutting than spring. It’s usually cooler, there’s less mud, and there are lots of opportunities for pretty pictures of autumn leaves. Yesterday was overcast with a sharp breeze that meant despite layering, we didn’t take off the layers. I took some shots with the artsy filters on my Canon Power Shot of golden tamarack against snow-covered firs and pines. Some turned out, some are…well, more material for book covers and promotions, I suppose.

#

Along with fall comes my birthday. Sixty-eight this year. Some years linger lightly, others bear a weight. For some reason sixty-eight has that resonance for me. As I said to my husband this morning, “A year and eleven months more, and I’ll have outlived my mother.”

But it’s not just that. There are some days when I catch myself after fretting about not doing enough and I have to think—I’m in my late sixties now. Sixty-eight and today I schooled my Marker horse at various gaits, including an attempt at racking. Which…I think he is doing. Either that or an extended fox-trot. He was a wee bit sparky, a wee bit on the muscle, but—he also called for me and fretted at the gate because he heard me talking to Dez and he wanted me there. Now.

I never thought I’d still be riding an energetic young horse in my late sixties. Here I am, however. Granted, he’s a safe horse moving into his full maturity at whatever age he really is (vet said seven in the spring of 2024, which would make him eight. Hard to be sure, though. Horse physical and mental maturity is really an individual thing). But still—besides the racking, I asked him to stretch out and gallop a little bit. We’ve spent most of the summer working on a slow, rocking-horse canter). Boy can move when he wants to, and today he wanted to. Which was fine. And it’s good to know that I can still gallop a horse on my sixty-eighth birthday.

#

Thinking about time passing also affects my writing, as well. I’m working on a high fantasy at the moment (yes, it will be a trilogy!) and one of the protagonists is an older man who has decided to step down from his leadership role because, well…his wives have died. One of the young women he helped raise as part of his extended family circle (in this world the terms Heartfather, Heartmother, and Heartsdaughter/Heartsson are common) has died and become a Goddess, while the other one has successfully overthrown the Big Bad Emperor (with the help of the woman who became Goddess). He has visions of the woman who is the heir to the new Empress, and…he not only wants to help his Heartsdaughter the Empress but he’s curious about this woman he keeps seeing in visions.

More than that, he grows to realize that he really, really wants to do something different with his life. He wants to matter—and it becomes clear that he wants to leave his position as Leader to his grandson, who is a rising star in his own right. He doesn’t have a reason to stay where he is, so…he’s moving on, to reinvent himself. And yeah, a lot is going to happen along the way.

#

I find it interesting that while I did have older protagonists pop up here and there when I was writing in my fifties, I really didn’t do much with them until my sixties. Part of the original Martiniere Legacy series is driven by the fact that the protagonists Ruby and Gabe are older, with a lot of life experience, and that knowledge shapes a lot of their decisions. The final book of that quartet, plus the matching individual related standalone books, ends up taking a long look at what later life can mean for different situations—including a clone whose progenitor was in his seventies, and who has inherited a lot of that man’s aging physical problems.

I’m fascinated by the places that my thought process is taking me these days. It’s definitely different from when I was younger.

Well, we’ll see what this year brings.


Minnesota fraud investigation

Oct. 29th, 2025 06:24 pm
otter: (Default)
[personal profile] otter posting in [community profile] thisfinecrew
I'm not even sure what to ask, say, or do about this.

I have services from an ARMHS worker and provide services via IHS and PCA. It's about half of my monthly income.

"The Association of Residential Resources in Minnesota, which represents 200 organizations that provide disability services, said pausing payments for the Medicaid programs could “destabilize an already fragile care network.”

“Pausing payments to legitimate providers for up to 90 days is not an accountability measure, it’s an existential threat to the care infrastructure that keeps Minnesotans with disabilities safe, housed and supported in their community,” ARRM CEO Sue Schettle said in a statement.

Among the 14 affected programs: Integrated Community Supports, Nonemergency Medical Transportation, Peer Recovery Services, Adult Rehabilitative Mental Health Services, Adult Day Services, Personal Care Assistance/Community First Services and Supports, Recuperative Care, Individualized Home Supports, Adult Companion Services, Night Supervision, Assertive Community Treatment and Intensive Residential Treatment Services.

https://minnesotareformer.com/briefs/walz-pauses-payments-for-14-high-risk-medicaid-programs/
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
A Good Impression
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 2, complete
Word count (story only): 1287
[Thursday, December 15, 2016, barely past seven in the morning]


To the City Engines Index
On to part two


:: This story was written for the October of 2025 Magpie Monday, from a prompt by [personal profile] readera. Rather than wait for sponsorship, I am posting it in two parts (on two days), to keep from making the timeline any more tangled. Thank you to the wonderful Readera for the idea, and I hope readers enjoy the story as much as I did while writing it! Part of the City Engines stories in Mercedes, in the Polychrome Heroics universe::




Someone rapped on the door to the Crank It! Car Repair Shop at five minutes past seven in the morning. Frank stumbled down the steps from the private apartment to the lobby, wearing a ratty gray sweatshirt and a pair of too-long sleep pants that pooled at his ankles and hung low on his hips. Frank rubbed at his eyes with the heel of one hand, even as he reached for the bolt to unlock the door. “May I help you?”

“Mister Caruthers? My name is Lautaro Fuentes, and I’ve been hired to help you with the city council requirements. I believe that you’ve been told of the offer? I got in about nine last night and the Finns suggested that I sleep before coming to meet you. They were very hospitable, which means that I’ve been up and comfortably ready to start the day for the last hour.”
Read more... )
kitewithfish: (pic#16111764)
[personal profile] kitewithfish
What I’ve Read

The Ottomans: Khans, Caesars and Caliphs by Marc David Baer – As I wrote in more detail last week, this book is a really great overview of the Ottoman Empire, in the opinion of someone who knows very little about the Ottoman Empire. Baer’s style felt approachable and clear and made a point of grouping developments both thematically and in a clear timeline.

I will concede, I felt more positively about the book last week, but that’s not a writing failure. The latter half of the book is a downward slide from religious tolerance and multicultural assimilation into a larger Empire (good or bad, it did allow upward mobility!) to an ethnic and religious paranoia of the non-Turkish elements of the failing state. The book’s coverage of the Armenian Genocide was, in fact, both horribly clear and quite personal and made me very very sad.

I again recommend this book and if anyone has other books that look at the Ottoman Empire’s history, I would like to read them!

Murder Must Advertise - Dorothy Sayers (narrated by Ian Carmichaels, thank you again anon donor of audiobooks!) – Hilariously funny and also deeply goddamn bleak. It does a very compelling job of showing Wimsey’s doublemindedness while he’s undercover – at times, he truly thinks of himself as Mr Bredon, advertising copywriter in a quirky little office, and occupies that role with humor and warmth. Then he has to come back to being Lord Peter Wimsey, investigating the death of a young man at that same office, and knowing that he’s likely to do real damage to at least one person involved in a real and dangerous criminal ring at the advertising firm. The tension is well structured and given breaks of humor around the office, but has clear stakes for individual people we meet who are harmed by the crimes the scheme is covering up.

Spoilery reflections on the ending of this book and on The Unfortunateness at the Bellona Club )


What I’m Reading


Of Monsters and Mainframes by Barbara Truelove – I tried the audiobook – I really did! But the main narrator was much too annoying to continue. (I’d mention them by name but this appears to be an ensemble audiobook with several narrators and I can’t tell which one this was.) The book is unfortunately for a book club – I would have bailed by now, if it were up to me, just because the pacing is so glacial. It’s trying to do Murderbot and failing to make it fun.

A key failure is the description impedes the pacing. When you come across our Computer Main Character doing a normal thing in an unusual way because they are a computer, not a human, you get a description of how that action is completed in computer-y way. And the first time, that’s great. But. You get that same description over, and over, and over. As a result, instead of grabbing the reader swiftly and towing them excitingly thru realizing, gasp! your ship is full of CORPSES! Then the WEREWOLF attacks! - the text plods. Pauses. Observes. Describes. And then plods again.

This is rapidly proving to be the sort of book I would read ONLY via audiobook because the text is too irksome, but the audiobook sucked! The narrator is very very English and very very irksome. So on I plod, reading a book that doesn’t trust me to remember that computers are different than people.

The Nine Tailors
by Dorothy Sayers – I almost mention this book in self defense against the accusation that I’m bored by Of Monsters and Mainframes because I only like sexier and dumber writing. (No one has made this accusation, other than the hobgoblins of my mind.) This is an English countryside murder mystery that doesn’t get to the discovery of the body until our main character has been introduced to the little town via their New Year’s Eve change ringing performance that involves 8 men ringing church bells for nine hours in precise mathematical permutations. It’s fascinating, and compelling, and I don’t actually care that I’m not able to perfectly understand everything that’s happening, because the book’s momentum is taking me forward at a satisfying clip. The people of the town are interesting, and there’s a blatant self-insert of Sayer’s childhood self in a precocious little teen who wants to be a writer. (I love her.)

What I’ll Read Next
Witness for the Dead Katherine Addison - for next week, I have read the first half, I should get on this!
The Fortunate Fall by Cameron Reed
Next Earthsea book?

Bundle of Holding: Tentacles 7

Oct. 29th, 2025 02:14 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


The seventh all-new library of Sanity-shattering tabletop roleplaying ebooks inspired by the Cthulhu Mythos.

Bundle of Holding: Tentacles 7

Postponed video for a Harp Twins post

Oct. 29th, 2025 12:41 pm
neonvincent: For posts about geekery and general fandom (Shadow Play Girl)
[personal profile] neonvincent
I decided it didn't belong in 'Catacombs' and other spooky songs by the Harp Twins for Halloween. Maybe next year.

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