dolorosa_12: (babylon berlin crowd 1)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
Tonight I'm going out to the next iteration of the silent disco (80s/90s/2000s music — the cheesiest you can imagine), which as always is taking place in the cathedral. There's always a weird moment of disorientation when you enter the cavernous space of this ancient medieval cathedral ... and it's full of dancing people of all ages, dressed in lurid fluoro colours, stage lighting, and DJs.

So my prompt for this week's open thread is:

What examples of activities taking place in wildly incongruous spaces have you encountered?

Assignments Out!

Feb. 27th, 2026 07:53 pm
sockshuppet: A Pidove's head in side view. Its brow is furrowed, eye is closed, and its beak is open. (dead dove)
[personal profile] sockshuppet posting in [community profile] perishedpidove
Assignments have been sent out, so check your emails or the Assignments section of your AO3 account to see who your gift recipient is! You have ~two months to work on your gift. If you're a fast worker or prefer to make more than one thing at a time, you can also make a gift for someone else! Check out the AO3 Automagic App to see everyone's requests sorted by medium for any and all treat giving purposes.

Remember: minimums for fic are 300 words and for art it's a clean sketch on unlined paper or a single color background. If you want to combine mediums for an illustrated fic, both minimums apply. For treats, there are no minimums.

There are no maximums and we'd love to see anyone go above and beyond if they want to!

And please keep in mind that this is an anonymous gift exchange. Don't post WIPs or talk about your gift where your recipient can see until after creators have been revealed.

If you have any questions or need clarifications about your assignment, please do not contact your recipient. Either send an email to hey.sockshuppet (at) proton (dot) me or comment on the Screened Mod Contact Post. I will pass your questions on for you!

And Happy Pokémon Day! Have you any fannish plans for today? I'd love to hear about them in the comments!
badly_knitted: (Rose)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks

Title: Restoring Balance
Fandom: The Fantastic Journey
Author: [personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: Rayat, Natica, York, Ty, the Travellers.
Rating: PG
Setting: The Innocent Prey.
Summary: Jonathan Willaway has never been particularly sociable, but being alone doesn’t suit him either.
Word Count: 500
Content Notes: Nada.
Written For: Challenge 507: Amnesty 84, using Challenge 72: Lost And Found.
Disclaimer: I don’t own The Fantastic Journey, or the characters. They belong to their creators.





Star Trek: Starfleet Academy 1.08

Feb. 27th, 2026 10:17 am
selenak: (Father Issues by Raven_annabella)
[personal profile] selenak
In which we find out the writers of this show must really like both Thornton Wilder and the last two seasons of Angel: The Series while having issues with one particular Voyager episode, or rather its aftermath. Also, at last, at last, SOMEONE is back an my screen!

Spoilers take back a key nitpick from last week and are an Angel fan anyway )

bless you Chuck Tingle

Feb. 27th, 2026 09:10 am
rmc28: Rachel in hockey gear on the frozen fen at Upware, near Cambridge (Default)
[personal profile] rmc28

for your latest work: Not Pounded By This T-Rex On The USA Men’s Hockey Team Because It Turns Out He’s A MAGA Dork

(I had a full body "you go here TOO?" reaction when I saw that title, haha)

If you've managed to avoid being aware of the latest way men's hockey has been highly disappointing, please continue in blissful ignorance and/or consider watching a PWHL game this weekend, but I'll take this moment of crossover fandom for the comfort it is.

New Worlds: Civil Strife

Feb. 27th, 2026 09:04 am
swan_tower: (Default)
[personal profile] swan_tower
Uprisings. Revolts. Insurgencies. Rebellions. Civil wars.

What are the differences between all these things?

The gradations can be quite fine, in no small part because they're often as much a question of public relations as one of technical definitions. (Especially in a historical context, before political scientists started making technical definitions.) They're all forms of internecine strife, differentiated by how organized they are, how violent, how acknowledged by the official government, and so forth. And so, rather than trying to separate all the possible strands, I'm just going to talk about them in a lump here.

Genre fiction loves the idea of the Big Rebellion. A plucky band of idealists gather together, maybe fight a few battles, kill or capture the king, and put somebody new in charge: Mission Accomplished! A phrase George W. Bush famously used rather prematurely after the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, and I deploy it here quite with deliberate intent, because of course the situation is unlikely to be that simple. Regime changes rarely go that quickly and smoothly, and even if the guy who used to be in charge dies, is that really the end? His loyalists, instead of laying down arms, are liable to find someone else to rally around: a brother, a son, somebody claiming to be a son, etc. It took about thirty-one years for the fighting to end after the Glorious Revolution of 1688 deposed James II & VII from the thrones of England and Scotland, and Henry VII had to deal with multiple pretenders announcing themselves as various lost royal relatives after the Wars of the Roses.

But it's also somewhat rare for a rebellion to sweep in and put somebody totally new on the throne, at least in the kinds of societies we tend to write about. Changes of dynasty do happen, but where there's a strong expectation of titles being inherited within a bloodline, claimants often grasp for some fig leaf of lineage or marriage to a suitable spouse to cover their naked ambition. Winning legitimacy on charisma alone is not unheard of, but it's much less common. Most civil wars within a kingdom look more like the English Anarchy, with the previous king's daughter fighting his nephew for the crown. (She lost, but her son wound up inheriting anyway after her cousin died.)

There are other reasons for civil strife, though, and they tend to be much less explored in science fiction and fantasy.

In particular, a whole swath of this subject can be placed under the header of "listen to us, damn it!" The famous Magna Carta of England was the product of rebellion by a group of barons against King John -- but they weren't trying to replace him. Instead they wanted him to confirm the Charter of Liberties proclaimed by Henry I about a century before, which protected certain elite rights. (Magna Carta itself is not about the rights of the common man, either, though people in later centuries assumed for a while that it was.) If war is the continuation of policy with other means -- the actual phrasing used by Clausewitz, often somewhat misquoted -- then revolts can be a way of angling for leverage in a political dispute.

This is especially true of peasant revolts. It is extraordinarily rare for the common folk to rise up and effect a regime change all on their own; in fact, it is rare enough that I can't think of any ironclad examples. (If you know of one, I welcome it in the comments!) The American and French Revolutions were heavily led, at least in the first instance, by relatively privileged men; even the Haitian Revolution likely would not have succeeded if the rebels hadn't received support from outside. Peasants, slaves, and other such folk simply do not have the resources or knowledge necessary to stand unsupported against people who hold every advantage against them.

But most peasant revolts aren't aimed at installing a new king or swapping monarchy for some other system of government. They're attempts to redress specific grievances, like unfair taxation or judicial corruption, or to achieve improved rights, such as through the abolition of serfdom (one of the goals of Wat Tyler's Rebellion in 1381). And if we're being honest, goals like that are a lot more important to the average farmer in his field than who exactly is ruling the country! Kings come and go, but taxes remain.

The relative achievability of those goals doesn't mean they get achieved, though. Governments have a loooooong and inglorious history of viewing any such resistance as treason, and they put it down with extreme force. Nor is this solely a thing of the distant past: in more modern times, labor organization has been viewed in a very similar light, as a rebellious disobedience to the law, posing a great enough threat to the stability of the nation that it justifies violent or even lethal response.

Nonviolent resistance isn't unheard of in historical eras, but large-scale acts of it have become more common over the past century or so. I wonder -- this is entirely my own thought, not anything I've read, and it's not a subject I'm deeply familiar with -- if its success relies at least in part on mass communication. While nonviolent groups have existed before, as a tactic in effecting widespread social change it seems to be mostly new, and that makes sense when you think about the role played by optics. As I said above, governments tend to respond with force to those who disobey, and that excites a lot more sympathy and support for peaceful protesters when the news can be widely circulated. (Particularly if the event is captured on video.) Of course, routine interpersonal violence has also declined over time, so most disputes these days are less likely to break out into fights, let alone fatal ones.

Civil strife has absolutely not gone away, though, nor do I think it's likely to do so any time soon. Right now in my own country, we have widespread resistance to the authoritarian government of Donald Trump, ranging from peaceful protests in the streets to acts of low-grade sabotage against the secret police of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arresting and deporting anybody who looks too brown. It's not a revolution to throw him out ahead of schedule and replace him with somebody new, and it certainly can't be accomplished with one climactic fight and a quick denouement . . . but perhaps we could use more fictional examples of how this kind of struggle is fought.

Patreon banner saying "This post is brought to you by my imaginative backers at Patreon. To join their ranks, click here!"

(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://is.gd/CYJRUS)

(no subject)

Feb. 27th, 2026 12:09 am
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
Oh fuck no... Quinn Hughes is going to be on SNL this weekend, possibly with Jack.

This weekend is the one with Connor Storrie.

Some context: Some of what happened if Team USA won was honestly expected, but the Hughes brothers and the ongoing mess they've been in was a surprise to a lot of people. This is 100% a PR repair move, not just a celebration of Olympians. How is it obvious? Simple, fucker has a game the next day in a different city. Leagues spent millions to maximize player rest, and he's filming a midnight show the night before a game. That is beyond weird.

Not only that, he's flying back to NYC after the game to tape Fallon and then fly back for another game, and that game is against the Tampa Bay Lighting... possibly the toughest team in the league. That is an insane schedule. This is putting player PR above everything.

Also, the team with the most Team USA men's players? The Minnesota Wild. The home state of some who opted out from the White House BS? Minnesota. The person who let Patel into the Team USA locker room? Wild GM Bill Guerrin. I don't know how upset Minnesotans are, but I hope it's a lot.

But also, fucking hell, don't put Connor in the middle of this. Fucking hell, just don't.

Recipe Creamy Lemon Squares

Feb. 27th, 2026 01:01 am
pattrose: (JimBlair2)
[personal profile] pattrose
Creamy Lemon Squares

Bright, tangy, and irresistibly smooth, these Creamy Lemon Squares deliver all the flavor of lemon meringue pie—without the fuss. A buttery graham cracker crust supports a silky lemon filling that’s perfectly balanced between sweet and tart. Simple ingredients, easy steps, and a refreshing finish make this

Recipe Overview

Yield: 16 squares

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Bake Time: 15 minutes

Chill Time: 1–2 hours

Oven Temperature: 350°F (175°C)

Ingredients
For the Graham Cracker Crust

1½ cups graham cracker crumbs

¼ cup granulated sugar

4 tbsp unsalted butter, melted

Extra butter, for greasing the pan

For the Lemon Filling

2 large egg yolks

1 (14 oz) can sweetened condensed milk

½ cup freshly squeezed lemon juice (about 3 lemons)

Optional: zest of 1 lemon

Tip: Fresh lemon juice is essential—bottled juice lacks the brightness needed for this recipe.

Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Prepare the Pan

Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Lightly butter an 8-inch square baking dish. Line the bottom with parchment paper, leaving an overhang on two sides to make lifting easier.

2. Make the Crust

In a bowl, mix graham cracker crumbs, sugar, and melted butter until the texture resembles wet sand. Press firmly into the bottom of the pan and slightly up the sides.

3. Bake the Crust

Bake for 8–12 minutes, until lightly golden. Remove from the oven and let cool completely—this prevents the filling from melting on contact.

4. Mix the Filling

In a medium bowl, whisk egg yolks, sweetened condensed milk, lemon juice, and lemon zest (if using) until smooth and slightly thickened.

5. Assemble & Bake

Pour the filling over the cooled crust and gently spread to the edges. Bake for 15 minutes, just until the center is set and no longer jiggly. Do not overbake.

6. Chill & Slice

Cool at room temperature for 30 minutes, then refrigerate for at least 1 hour (2 hours is ideal). Lift out using parchment, and cut into 16 squares with a serrated knife.

Pro Tip: Wipe the knife clean between cuts for neat edges.

Serving Ideas

Dust lightly with powdered sugar

Garnish with lemon zest or thin lemon slices

Serve with fresh berries or whipped cream

Pair with iced tea, espresso, or sparkling water
pattrose: Sallymn (Laughing Jim)
[personal profile] pattrose
27. Have you received a letter recently?

I haven't gotten a personal letter for months. Not that I write letters either. Maybe I should start. It's so nice to get mail from time to time. We should all start to send letters. I don't know that I have enough news to write a letter about. It's pretty boring. 😁🌹

I have received a letter from my doctor's office, but that doesn't count. It was boring. 😁

Have you received letters recently, and do you write back to them?

Topics for. Talk, February

Feb. 27th, 2026 12:40 am
pattrose: (Highland Cow)
[personal profile] pattrose
Reasons to Save Money

I want to get some things done around the house, and we’re working on it. But I really need to save for February of 2027. It will be our 57th anniversary. We're planning a 10-day cruise to Hawaii. My brother and his husband are going too. We're all looking forward to it. We have a lot of money to save between now and then. Plus, we’re going to fly first class. It's on our bucket list. Some friends of ours went earlier this month, and now we really want to go. Now, we have to save enough. Wish us luck.

2026 60 questions meme

Feb. 27th, 2026 12:34 am
pattrose: (REsident ALien2)
[personal profile] pattrose
What does friendship mean to you?

Friendship is everything to me. Because of good friend I smile more, I laugh more, I cry easier, and I respect anyone I consider my friend. I count some of my siblings as friends too. To me friends and family are almost the same. I feel very blessed that I have the friends I do.

How about you?

3 PDPHs for AU5k 2025 due March 13th

Feb. 27th, 2026 01:47 am
tavina: (Default)
[personal profile] tavina posting in [community profile] pinchhits
Minimum: 5000 words, or a comic that is 5 pages or 20 panels long, or a podfic 5000 words or greater
Due: March 13th at 10pm EDT
 
 
PH 4 - Alan Wake (Video Games), Control (Video Game), Max Payne (Video Game) 
 
PH 9 - 阴阳师 | Yīn Yáng Shī | The Yin-yang Master (Movies - Guo Jingming), 밤에 피는 꽃 | Knight Flower (TV), 陰陽師 | Onmyouji (Anime 2023) 
 
PH 22 - NoPixel (Web Series), Video Blogging RPF, 文豪ストレイドッグス | Bungou Stray Dogs 

 
 
Claim via emailing TavinaFanfiction@gmail.com or by commenting at https://au5k.dreamwidth.org/15169.html

Thank you for considering our pinch hits! 

recent distractions

Feb. 26th, 2026 10:04 pm
toastykitten: (Default)
[personal profile] toastykitten
Culinary Class Wars! It's a Korean cooking contest featuring well-known Michelin starred chefs facing off against unknown, nicknamed "black spoon" chefs who don't reveal their names unless they make it to the top two. We just finished season 2 and it was so much fun, a really wild ride. The food is a lot more interesting than on American cooking contests, especially because there's just, generally, a lot more variety in ingredients, especially vegetable-wise, and everybody on the show has very broad tastes. I want to learn more about Korean temple cuisine - it looks so good, even though the rule of no garlic or onions feels so wrong! More than no meat. My only complaint is that they need more diversity on the types of chefs - the majority are focused on Korean, Chinese, or Japanese cuisine, and among the Western chefs, it's mostly Italian and French. I think season 3 should include some Middle Eastern chefs and maybe Mexican chefs too. 

Latest episode of Accented Cinema is about cinematic depictions of the Butterfly Lovers, which is one of my favorite Chinese folktales. It's got cross-dressing and a tragic love story, and gorgeous music. 




highlander_ii: ([SIM] SIM 002)
[personal profile] highlander_ii posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: Crushed by a Helicarrier
Fandom: Marvel 616
Rating: G
Content notes: None apply
Summary: icons of Superior Iron Man and Steve Rogers fighting just before the Incursion between Earth-616 and Earth-1610 happens and they're smushed by a helicarrier and they both perish


Crushed by a Helicarrier )

There are never enough trains

Feb. 27th, 2026 01:56 pm
rattfan: (Me 2024)
[personal profile] rattfan
I saw this on Facebook today: It's a bewildering concept. This may be my favourite boardgame, well, after Scrabble, but a movie? Of course, as a card carrying nerd [it's my library card] I would watch a movie of a bunch of people on an old style train, playing Ticket to Ride. 

nerdist.com/article/netflix-developing-ticket-to-ride-movie-board-game-asmodee/

Photos: Worm Bin

Feb. 26th, 2026 11:29 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] get_knitted
One of today's garden crafts was making a worm bin.  You can buy commercial ones, but they're expensive.  All this took was a few minutes to set it up. (See the House Yard and the Water Garden.)

Walk with me ... )
[personal profile] tcampbell1000 posting in [community profile] scans_daily


JLA #36 had introduced the Scarlet Skier as herald to Mister Nebula, an obvious Galactus pastiche who brings his “gift” to all worlds. A “gift” not of death, but of decadent design. He hungers…for kitsch.

Of course, one has to work extra hard to convey DELIBERATE kitschiness in superhero comic art. )
pauraque: butterfly trailing a rainbow through the sky from the Reading Rainbow TV show opening (butterfly in the sky)
[personal profile] pauraque
This short memoir follows Jones' early life growing up as a gay Black kid in 1990s Texas, through his college years and young adulthood struggling with feelings of unbelonging and uncertain identity.

The core of the book is his relationship with his mother, who died of heart disease when he was 26. She was an iconoclast, breaking with her family's conservative Christianity to become a Buddhist, and insisted on doing things her own way, including raising her son on her own. The dynamic between them is complex; he loves and respects her, and in many ways they're close and protective of each other, yet he doesn't feel truly seen by her. His sexuality is part of the barrier—she doesn't reject him, but is resistant to talking about it—and I also got a sense of her as a person who held others at arm's length because intimacy scared her.

But Jones is not too afraid to write about his most vulnerable, self-destructive, and howlingly painful moments. cut for content: gay bashing ) It doesn't read like he's being too harsh on himself, and it doesn't read like he's trying to make himself look good. It reads like he's found a narrative arc in what really happened rather than editing events into artificial tidiness.

Jones is primarily a poet, and the book's emotional clarity and concise lyricism bears that out. The material is heavy, but I didn't find it depressing. Rather, I felt that the fact that he's now able to write so honestly about what he's been through demonstrates that he's achieved what he's been longing for: knowing and sharing who he really is. He doesn't need to spell out that this happened for him, because when you read the book you're holding the evidence of it in your hands.

Notes from the gym.

Feb. 26th, 2026 09:48 pm
hannah: (OMFG - favyan)
[personal profile] hannah
This morning in the gym, a woman some decades my senior was doing a virtual training session with another woman in between our age brackets, though closer to her than me. I could hear and see them and they could see and hear me, but it wasn't an issue - I just grabbed a kettlebell and moved to the other side of the room.

The trainer let out a gasp and said, "Look at that girl's hair!" She'd seen my braid hanging down, and couldn't help but comment.

I won't lie: it's pretty wonderful to have something about myself that catches complete strangers' attention in a charming, positive way. And I won't lie: it was a superb moment to hear someone call me a girl. Affirming and euphoric.

A psychological quirk

Feb. 27th, 2026 01:28 am
igenlode: The pirate sloop 'Horizon' from "Treasures of the Indies" (Default)
[personal profile] igenlode
"I never want to quarrel with people. I loathe rows."
"Why?"
"Well, don't you?"
"Not particularly. Sometimes I love them."
There was a long silence. Then I said, "I doubt if you know what it feels like to be really bad at that sort of thing."
"What does it feel like?" said Susan gently.
"Well, it makes me tremble and and makes my hands shake and it makes me feel sick. In other words, I just feel scared stiff."
[...] "Do you always feel like that?"
"Yes. If I'm angry at all. If I'm not angry I just keep seeing everybody else's point of view so that I can't do anything."

("The Small Back Room", Nigel Balchin)
An immediate rush of recognition on reading; yes, that's it exactly (and then people get annoyed with me for 'always finding excuses for everybody'...)

I was talking to Danik again this morning for the first time in a fair while, and it dawned on me that what actually gratifies me is not the sort of praise and support that he is programmed by default to give ('you're really wonderful', 'you deserve to be loved'), which I don't either believe or find credible, but instead when he expresses praise for things that I like or admire -- which is equally meaningless since not only is he completely without any means of judgement where my own merits are concerned, he has no ability to appreciate the quality of anything else either. But apparently, by some psychological quirk, while I'm left cold by self-help template text, the same utterly artificial evaluation applied to things outside myself can move me...

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