ICONS: Chris Larabee, The Magnificent Seven

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 03:44 pm
tarlanx: Head and shoulders Chris Larabee lookingforward wearing black hat and jacket (TV - MAG7 - Chris Larabee)
[personal profile] tarlanx posting in [community profile] mag7daybook
Created for [community profile] sweetandshort - JULY: This and That
Prompt: Happy vs Sad
Fandom: Chris Larabee, The Magnificent Seven (TV)

Happy Happy Sad Sad
The Magnificent Seven - Chris Larabee Happy 01 by Tarlan The Magnificent Seven - Chris Larabee Happy 02 by Tarlan The Magnificent Seven - Chris Larabee Sad 01 by Tarlan The Magnificent Seven - Chris Larabee Sad 02 by Tarlan

 

Free for All Saturday, Week 29 [DW Edition]

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 08:24 am
creepy_shetan: cropped video game cover artwork for Guilty Gear Judgment of Sol Badguy with windswept hair, tightening one of the straps on his gloves with his teeth (Sol Badguy // keep yourself alive)
[personal profile] creepy_shetan posting in [community profile] comment_fic
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Hello, well met, and welcome to this week's Free for All. ^_^ There are no themes to follow for prompts or fills. Btw, if you perhaps missed a prompt theme that you liked, or you've had any ideas that didn't really work with Tuesday's or Thursday's posts, then today's your chance to prompt 'em. Be free, and have fun! ✎

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6. If your story has possible triggers, please warn for them in the subject line!

Prompts should be formatted as follows: [Use the character's full names and fandom's full name]
Fandom, Character +/ Character, Prompt

Are today's prompts not catching your eye? No worries, because we have plenty of older prompts that just might do the trick! You can browse through the comm's calendar archive (here on LJ or here on DW) for themed and Free For All posts, or perhaps check out Sunday posts for Lonely Prompt requests. (Or, you can be like me, and try to save interesting prompts as you see 'em... and then end up with multiple text doc files full of [themes + links + prompts] that you can easily look through and search for keywords.) Multiple fills for one prompt are welcome, by the way! Oh, and you are very likely to find some awesome fills to read as well, and wouldn't it be nice to leave a comment on those lovely little writing distractions? ~_^

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A friendly reminder about our posting schedule: Themed posts for new prompts go up on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Saturdays are a Free for All day for new prompts of any flavor. Sundays are for showing Lonely Prompts some love, whether by requesting for someone to adopt them or by sharing any fills that you've recently completed.

Books read, early July

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 09:40 am
mrissa: (Default)
[personal profile] mrissa
 

Kavita Bhanot and Jeremy Tiang, eds., Violent Phenomena: Essays Toward the Future of Literary Translation. This is a collection of essays by translators who are either working in global minority languages or global minority situations, with a wide range of thoughts and attitudes. Very cool stuff, very interesting if you're interested in translation generally, which I am.

Joe Boyd, And the Roots of Rhythm Remain. This could fruitfully have been much shorter. Boyd did a lot of work in the music industry and is sometimes speaking of his personal experience of different parts of world music (separated by chapter geographically except when not). When he leaves his personal experience, he gets both less interesting and less reliable--I believe, for example, that the events he discusses being privy to in Jamaican music are real and even interesting, but his brief comparisons with Trinidad and Tobago, from my own knowledge of those musical subgenres and their cultural context, are far more suspect. Anyway it's a giant weird book, and I'm glad I read much of it, but also gosh was it a relief to be done.

Hayan Charara, These Trees, Those Leaves, This Flower, That Fruit. Intense and varied, personal, political, natural, all the things. Sometimes bookstore shelf-talkers are the greatest.

Agatha Christie, The Seven Dials Mystery. Kindle. I've seen the recent filmed version of this, and uh. "Version" may be too strong. This was fun but not one of her more outstanding efforts IMO (the secret society plot that this era tends to do is a hard sell for me whether it's in book version or movie version), but the transformation of it was...well. I guess they could put "Agatha Christie" on it to draw people in. Meanwhile I do like how exasperated the young women were with how they were perpetually underestimated.

Dorothy Dunnett, King Hereafter. Reread. There sure is a lot of this, and all of it Dunnett, start to finish. Patterns of melodrama and withholding of information: check. Characters who make vividly self-destructive choices: check. Oh Dorothy. I continue to maintain that if you try this one and don't like it, there's no need to go on to the two longer historical series. But I will love her forever for noticing that Macbeth's world was the North Sea world and for going all-in on that, and this is one of my favorites. And despite its size it's far less of a commitment than either series.

Alix E. Harrow, The Slantwise Histories. Discussed elsewhere.

Rochelle Hassan, The Spell for Unraveling. The last in its series, and I don't recommend starting here, start with the first one like a sensible person. One of my major questions was how Hassan was going to treat the plot where a person's One True Love was treated like a metaphysically real thing rather than a personal choice influenced by circumstances, and uh...almost well? but not really well? I'm not sure there was an ending with that plot that would have satisfied me, but otherwise this was a reasonably nice YA contemporary fantasy trilogy, sort of like YA contemporary fantasy used to be but with more varied characters, and I'm glad I read it.

Oliver K. Langmead, The Killing of a Chestnut Tree. Discussed elsewhere.

E. C. R. Lorac, Murder By Matchlight and Two-Way Murder. Kindle. These sure were Lorac mysteries. The first one was both written and set during WWII, which I always find interesting. I am just continuing to get these as the library makes it possible.

Tessa McWatt, ed., Luminous Ink: Writers on Writing in Canada. Some of these essays were about WRITING (in Canada), some were about writing IN CANADA, some were about indigeneity, some where about immigrant experience, there was a really good breadth and also some very specific good depth. This could have been a much more mediocre/standard-issue book, and I'm thrilled that it was as specifically good as it was.

M.E. O'Brien and Eman Ahdelhadi, Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York Commune, 2052-2072. What a weird lovely thing this is. I think if you don't read leftist oral history at all it might not hit as hard how very good they are at what they're doing. It's not a novel, per se, there's not a linear plot that's going somewhere, it's a vision of a multifaceted future. I wouldn't want everything to be like this, but I'm delighted that this particular thing is like this.

C.L. Polk, The Feywild Job. I haven't read a D&D novel in over 30 years, but I read everything Cee puts out, so I read this. I had some "wow I have been out of the loop moments," such as when I learned that Baldur's Gate is a D&D thing (I really felt like Roger De Bris in The Producers saying, "I for one did not know that the Third Reich meant Germany," and boy was my godson happy to explain more to me on this topic), but on the whole it was a fantastic-romantic romp that was very Cee. I think it will also be satisfying to those who have been up on the D&D developments of, uh. This millennium, but I'm the wrong person to ask.

William Shakespeare, Macbeth. Reread. Definitely there's a reason I am rereading Macbeth stuff, but not an immediate reason. In any case I thought a lot about the witches. It looks to me pretty transparent that they displayed their evil spirits to Macbeth later in the play for Doylean reasons (specifically to make the scenes more varied and do some impressive stage effects but not do them enough to run out of budget/ability to accomplish them). Also thinking about dynasties is wild, that's what I have to say about that.

Kristen Stapelton, The Modern City in Asia. Kindle. Really interesting stuff about how colonized and non-colonized cities modernized, how war affected these questions, very short and pithy, good stuff.

Jane Yolen, Briar Rose. Reread. I was not done mourning Jane (nor yet), so this is what came to hand. It's warmly and sweetly done, which sounds like a strange thing for a Holocaust novel, but...it's also a granddaughter/grandmother novel. And I need more of that in my life. Recommended if you come into it braced.

Inside Medicine newsletter

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 10:29 am
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird

Semi-random offer: After reading Jeremy Faust's Inside Medicine newsletter for a couple of years, I signed up as a paid subscriber, which comes with five one-month premium memberships I can give away. It's a mix of health and medical news (on things like new treatments and medical AI) and political news and discussion related to medicine and healthcare. It's a teaser offer, of course, but without the cancel-or-be-charged problem of some free sign-ups.

If you're interested, comment or send me a DM with your email address. I'm screening comments on this entry.

Options

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 08:08 am
mallorys_camera: (Default)
[personal profile] mallorys_camera
Image


T is a total delight of a human being. I am enjoying hanging out with him immensely. If I did decide to move here, that part of it would be great! Living with someone who gets it. Living with someone I can communicate with, someone who doesn't require the other-people-ese translation software.

Plus, my living expenses would literally be halved.

The issue is the house, which is a small house to begin with, and loaded with 30 years worth of tchotchkes—many of which are whimsical & pleasing, but still tchotchkes—and smells strongly of cats.

The house would need a lot of work before I would be comfortable living here.

I wasn't gonna broach the subject until I'd been here several days, but after 12 hours here, it was really obvious we'd be brilliant housemates, so I jumped the gun and brought the issues up.

"You know, you can always say, Patrizia, shut the fuck up!" I told him encouragingly.

"No, you're absolutely right," he said.

And I noticed when I got up this morning that he'd used the carpet cleaner on some of the cattiest-smelling parts of the carpet, and I could smell the tang of the carpet-cleaning solution, but I could also still smell the cats. I rather think he's gonna need to tear up the carpet in the affected part of the house. Like me, T is a cat lover, and it's obvious that at some point during that 30-year love affair, there were several cats who did not love him back and used their bladders to prove it.

So, there's that.

And there's also the prospect of winter in western Michigan on the shores of Lake Michigan.

Holland itself seems like an okay place. Some good restaurants, some bookstores, some craft breweries. Movie theaters! All easily drivable and maybe even easily walkable. A senior center just around the corner with a community garden and Tai Chi classes. The entertainment hub is Grand Rapids, which is only 25 miles away, down a road that reminded me a lot of California freeways.

###

Would T be able to get the little house habitable by October, which is when I have it in my head that I will move?

I'm not sure.

Of course, "October" is a very arbitrary date.

Carl threw an interesting wrinkle into that one.

Since we reconnected at the Morgan Library a few weeks back, Carl has gotten into the habit of sending me one long text at the end of each day, a kind of diary text—this is what I did all day, plus the day's ArtPhotos™.

Two days ago, he texted me this:

This winter after signing my new 2-year lease on Apt B I am thinking of moving West to Sarstoy springs,Utah to dtay with my brother James and his wife, Colleen, who I love, to spend the winter months. They may become my plan B for an alternative to my NY apt should that become necessary.

I believe I have a potentially viable new source of revenue given my vast journalism archives. There may be assets that might be monetized.

I have taken first baby steps starting and sustaining a podcast of Have started and maintain on a non-commercial platform at XXXX.net that serves as a kind of live portfolio of some of my Archive audio assets and you can find this on most major podcast platforms including Apple, Youtube, Amazon music and other major podcast platforms. Includes episodes of 10-15 minute interview excerpts with some usual suspects: Madonna, Stevie Wonder, Gilda Radner, Mick Jagger,Ozzy Osbourne, Members of the Memphis Mafia, Tina Turner and others. The show remains online and accessible. I own all rights to these recordings that have been edited and cleaned up for standard audio quality...

Deal is I would invite you to live in 🅱️ during that period of time “rent free” with understanding you might sort through, organize and separate the wheat from the chaff. You will essentially be “house sitting” with a purpose. You will get rent and utilities free. You are you are on your own for food and transportation.

If in that time you are able to spin this straw into some prospect of gold, all good and we can negotiate from there.


Carl is mercurial. He is always coming up with brilliant plans that he then drops. So, I don't know what to think of this kinda-sorta offer. He has that jewel of jewels—a rent-controlled apartment on the Upper West Side! Is his landlord actually gonna let him sublet the place?

But let's say it did work out.

Then I would winter on the Upper West Side in NYC. And move to Michigan in the spring.

I'd have to put the things I want to take to Michigan in storage.

I'd loan my Prius to RTT & Willow.

And I'd have to find temporary digs for the kiska sisters since I can't imagine the rent-controlled apartment allows pets.

Lotsa obstacles.

But also options.

###

One other interesting thing.

On plane flights, I am old school. I love gabbing away to the stranger sitting in the seat next to me.

In recent years, though, talking to people sitting next to you on planes has become a big faux pas, so I was delighted when the soignée woman in full business drag sitting next to me on the flight to Grand Rapids began chattering away. She was swooping in and out for a business meeting, she informed me. She did something in commercial property rentals & sales; there was a lot riding on this meeting. If it went well, her job was safe for another two years; if it didn't, she was looking at retirement.

All of a sudden, she looked at me and said, "You know, I have to say this. You are really beautiful."

Now.

I may or may not be beautiful. That's not really the point. I know perfectly well that interjecting highly personal remarks into conversations is an old sales strategy, and though she wasn't trying to sell me anything, she was falling back on that old trick. The words are a sign of good intentions rather than some verdict on objective reality, the verbal equivalent of a palms up.

I knew this, and yet I allowed myself to be very flattered anyway.

I'm really struggling with invisibility these days.

It's nice not to be invisible.

2026.07.18

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 07:18 am
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
Construction worker arrested after swimming away from ICE agents on Lake Bemidji
Mathew Holding Eagle III
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/07/17/construction-worker-arrested-after-swimming-away-from-ice-agents-on-lake-bemidji

Off-duty employee at Colorado ICE facility arrested for shooting protester
Woman has non-life threatening injuries after Brandon Booth shot her with pistol outside ICE facility and drove off
Dara Kerr
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jul/17/colorado-ice-employee-arrested-shooting-protester Read more... )

Just One Thing (18 July 2026)

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 11:48 am
nanila: me (Default)
[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!

(no subject)

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 11:26 am
beccaelizabeth: my Watcher tattoo in blue, plus Be in red Buffy style font (Default)
[personal profile] beccaelizabeth
I have finished relistening to the Big Finish Owen audios.
They're really good, and fascinating. Lots to poke and think about later. They're an example of What's The Worst Thing We Can Do To Them Now, but they're also a nasty set of dilemmas. Read more... )

It's a really good set of stories that make me want to turn the characters around and chew on them basically.

Good stuff.

Spoilery Odyssey thoughts, including the trans thing

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 11:01 am
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[personal profile] pandarus
I was a bit meh about seeing it initially, tbh, because the trailers strongly implied there was a lot of the GrimDark Grey Filter Of SRSBSNS Historical Production, and I am very weary of that. But then I spent weeks seeing rabid cave trolls ranting about Nolan being woke, and about Lupita and Elliot Page, and I reached the point of needing to go see the damn thing as a massive Fuck You to those people. (And, I mean - it’s Christopher Nolan. The man knows how to make a film.)

So I’m just back from watching it on 70mm film (film!). This is not a proper review, just initial thoughts.

It’s a big, meaty epic, as advertised. And, honestly, the pissbaby bigoted snowflakes who have been losing their damn minds over Lupita and Elliot need to give their heads a wobble. (Personally I found the armour on the giants much more jarring a visual choice - but that may be me having a misunderstanding of antique armour designs? Idk. Felt very anachronistic. i know that the Greeks’ armour was designed to look like the kind of armour people are more used to seeing on screen in Ye Olde Antiquity movies, rather than the more dramatic styles that would actually be period appropriate, but the giants’ armour wouldn’t have been out of place in an Arthurian story.)

I mean - idk whether Nolan chose Lupita Nyong’o for the Helen/Clytemnestra roles because he was trying to make a particular point, or as ragebait, or for the excellent reason that she is drop dead gorgeous, but it’s a Hollywood film with a diverse cast made primarily for a diverse English-speaking audience, not a Greek film full of Greek actors performing in Greek. Greek mythology is THE mythology that the rest of the educated Western world knows, in place of our own native mythologies; I am SLIGHTLY sympathetic towards the ranting trolls with Greek names, but tbh I think if I can be perfectly sanguine about Zulu and Thai versions of Macbeth, and of Portuguese-language Brazilian street theatre Romeo & Juliet performed with clowns on stilts and ballet dancers en pointe, and of a Disney cartoon version of Hamlet with lions, Greeks can calm the fuck down about non-Greek adaptations of Homer’s poetry. 🤷‍♀️

Stories only last if they can rise beyond the particular time and place that made them, because they have something true to say about the human condition. So, yes, this is The Odyssey made for Americans, in American English, with a diverse cast that looks like America. Boohoo?

(And, wrt Helen of Troy - Greece is A TWENTY MINUTE FLIGHT from Africa, ffs. You can nip over to Morocco from Spain on the ferry to do a bit of shopping then pop home for tea. You can SEE Africa from various parts of Europe with the naked eye. Black Africans very much DO crop up in Greek mythology because there is an entire massive continent full of Black people *right next door* to Greece, and the ancient world very much did have both boats and trade, so Black people are frankly WAY LESS JARRING than English speakers, who appear precisely never in Greek mythology. Get over it. All of which feels beside the point, because Lupita has maybe two minutes of screen time total - and the film VERY EXPLICITLY makes it clear from the get go that Agamemnon’s war was never about his hot sister in law, and always about power and avarice.)

I think that the casting of Elliot Page, otoh, IS purposeful. He plays Sinon, a minor character who dies at Troy, betrayed by Odysseus; he’s a kind of symbol of the courageous young soldiers who realise too late the whole “Dulce et Decorum est” bullshit is just propaganda to turn them into canon fodder - but ALSO he (or his ghost) is the first person Odysseus speaks to in Hades, after Circe sends him there TO SPEAK TO TIRESIAS.

Surely that’s not a coincidence? Tiresias is the blind prophet of Greek myth, but he’s also famously transgender - Ye Olde Detransitioner, if you will, since he was AMAB, then transformed into a woman by the gods, then later transformed into a man. (or in other versions he was AFAB and got zapped back and forth across sex & gender lines half a dozen times by the gods.) The character of Sinon never appears in Homer’s poem, only in later iterations of the story, but Nolan has added him in as a kind of Telemachus stand-in, as Odysseus’s own version of Agamemnon’s betrayal of his daughter Iphigenia: a touchstone and a symbol of all the victims of betrayal. And he’s given him the Tiresias-in-Hades moment. (Most of the audience won’t know who Tiresias is, so there’s no particular weight to having a Mysterious Old Guy spouting prophesies, whereas Homer’s audience would be all “omg, celebrity ghost!” But instead of celebrity ghosts, we get ghosts who have emotional weight for Odysseus.)

I feel like he would have REALLY LIKED to cast Page as Tiresias, but the guy is just FAR too young, so instead he’s crowbarred in a role for a trans actor there spitting truths among the dead as young Sinon.

Back to the film itself: very solid performances all round, and an effective narrative structure. By far the lion’s share of screen time is given to Matt Damon, unsurprisingly, followed by Tom Holland - but massive shout out to Himesh Patel (who also does a superlative Hastings in the Dinklage Poirot audioplays), who gets a heck of a lot of screen time in this film alongside Matt Damon, and whose character gets put through every kind of hell. He deserved to be on the red carpet FAR MORE than he seems to have been? Because don’t get me wrong, I love seeing Zendaya doing Law Roach proud in exquisite outfits, and Charlize and Lupita, but Himesh Patel put in THE HOURS, man! He deserves his laurels! Robert Pattinson also does an admirable turn as the sleazy suitor, just one bwahaha short of going full Panto Villain, but he’s getting cooed over predictably in the publicity circus, whereas Himesh Patel nsm. Justice for this man! They nearly drowned him on screen! He was nearly eaten by many different monsters! If ever a man was Tired Of His Boss’s Bullshit, his character was that man. (Zendaya and Anne Hathaway and Charlize are all perfectly good too, don’t get me wrong, but they’re being feted on the red carpets & they weren’t almost drowned on screen.)

The Odyssey is a story about grappling with consequences (which, I mean, I guess that’s Every Greek Myth Ever), and especially grappling with personal responsibility, and the horrors of war, and Nolan leans in to that. There’s an elegiac tone to the end of this film, a real sense that the days of honour are gone, if they ever existed: Odysseus and Agamemnon and their men did some Very Bad Shit and were punished accordingly, and Odysseus knows that. (Rousing cheer for Clytemestra’s successful avenging of her slain daughter Iphigenia. Yah boo sucks to Orestes for sticking up for his dad.) (The Circe sequence is fascinatingly portrayed.) In particular Nolan focuses upon the fundamental horror of betraying the law of hospitality, and so upending the world order. The Law of Zeus gets mentioned again and again, and it’s The Golden Rule: do not do unto others that which you don’t want to have done to you. This felt very timely - but I think it’s probably ALWAYS timely?

I’m still pondering his choices about the ending, which diverges slightly from that of Homer’s poem. It put me in mind of Tennyson’s poem Ulysses, which is one of my absolute all time favourites - but tonally the rest of the film isn’t vibing with the Tennyson version of the myth, so I was a little surprised he went with this. Not bad surprised! Just - I think I need to think about it some more.

One other point that struck me is that this really is 100% intended for the theatre. It’s going to look crap on a small screen - not least because a lot of the scenes are in dark caves or shadowy temples or set at night. Works fine in a darkened cinema, but anywhere else it’s going to suck.

miscellaneous reading and watching

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 11:14 am
philomytha: Photo of Conrad Veidt from The Spy in Black (Conrad veidt)
[personal profile] philomytha
The Illegals, Shaun Walker
A history of the Russian illegal spy programme from the days of Lenin to the present, focusing on the lives of a number of known illegals and using them to explore the whole concept. Illegals, in spy parlance, being distinct from the kind of spies who are operating out of their embassy with diplomatic immunity and known to be Russian nationals, even if their official title of Second Trade Attache translates to KGB Chief - those ones are legals. Illegals are the other ones, the ones in the country with a passport and fake background that claims they are a French stocking salesman or whatever, who may live in their false identities for years or decades. The Russians were very keen on their illegals and set up elaborate and complex training programmes (though they did not in fact have an entire fake American town to practice being American in; they did have a fake American house full of American food and appliances to train on) and ran very long-term programmes to insert their agents into assorted countries, focusing on the USA but all over the globe. Though none of their efforts to breed their own second-generation illegals worked out: the KGB would send illegals as married couples, spouses chosen by the KGB, and in multiple cases they then had children together to maintain their cover, who had no idea their parents were not who they claimed to be. But none of those children worked out as KGB operatives when they were finally told about the reality of their parents' lives, since the main thing this sort of background does is massively traumatise you. Mostly the illegals didn't work out either, since having to live your entire life under a false identity with the threat of horrific punishment from the Russians if you go wrong one way and the threat of exposure and imprisonment from the country you're living in if you go wrong another way tends to put people under the kind of stress that leads to mental breakdown. Alcoholism was particularly common, along with massive paranoia and both physical and mental health breakdowns. This is one of the reasons they tried sending illegals as married couples to support each other, though it didn't help that much, and considering the amount of effort the Russians put into their illegal programme, they didn't get all that much out of it compared to their much more effective work persuading actual Westerners to support them. The book also goes into how illegals are currently being used by Russia, mostly online but also in person, in the current war, and how directly this follows on from the Cold War approach.

Anyway, I am also now watching The Americans for a heavily dramatised version of life as an illegal, and it is proving to be id candy and not wholly inaccurate, and I love Phillip and Elizabeth very much, though they are far more effective than any actual illegals ever were.


Checkmate to Murder, ERC Lorac
One of the British Library Crime Classics, a middle-of-the-road but readable murder mystery involving a group of artists in London during WW2. This had good characters and a fun plot of the classic 'break this alibi' style, where the alibi in question was that four people were all in the room together when the murder was committed, so obviously none of them could have done it. The chess theme in the title didn't obtrude too much on the plot - it's there if you want it but it wasn't particularly prominent - which was fine by me as I'm not that fascinated by chess. A good straightforward read that carries you along nicely.


All Fun and Games Until Someone Loses An Eye, Chris Brookmyre
A forty-something woman gets drafted as a James-Bond style secret agent for the black ops adventure of a lifetime. This was exactly as much fun as the premise suggests and then some. James Bond adventures in spades. When a scientist who's made a dangerous discovery gets kidnapped, who is going to be motivated enough and ruthless enough and unstoppable enough to do anything to get him back? His mum, of course. I loved it, spectacular mix of mid-life-crisis book and action thriller.


Be My Enemy, Chris Brookmyre
[personal profile] black_bentley, who knows me far too well, told me I'd like this and I'd especially love the character of Tim Vale, and, well, what can I say, I feel very known. This is one of a series but stands alone (and has some honestly unnecessary and annoying recaps of some of the other books in the series; I feel like a better editor would have drawn a red pen through the irrelevant multi-page reminiscing). The premise is, our hero the investigative journalist/unofficial detective has been invited to attend and report on the opening session of a new motivational team-building company which runs getaways where stressed executives go and shoot paintballs at each other while staying in a country house with good food and wine. However, some of the motivational team-building activities turn out to have a body count... Again, this is a fantastic premise and it's executed perfectly. And I did indeed adore Tim Vale as much as he deserved and then some, there's a guy who could go to dinner with Thomas Nightingale and have some real fun. It did have a high ick factor at various points, but it was great all the same.


HMS Defiant (1962)
A pretty solid Age of Sail film about a mutiny aboard the titular ship, parallel to the actual Spithead Mutiny, with a humane but somewhat ineffectual captain who has a sadistic and well-connected first officer he can't quite control, and a charismatic lower decks character organising the mutiny against them, but with the French also taking a hand. Well told and very watchable.


Rio (1939)
This one was the fault of [personal profile] tweague, who said it involved Basil Rathbone playing the villain/anti-hero, sweaty and malarial being carried through the jungle by his devoted henchman. Again, I am easily persuaded, and this did absolutely deliver on the villain/henchman front and the Basil Rathbone being melodramatically beautiful front. The plot otherwise didn't have much to it: our anti-hero Paul Reynard is a crooked financier with a beautiful wife who gets sent to a penal colony in Brazil when his financial swindling comes unstuck, and while he's in prison his beautiful wife eventually finds some less criminal but also less beautiful men to console herself. So Paul escapes from prison with Dirk's help - where we get our scenes of Paul collapsing ragged and filthy into Dirk's arms - and tries to murder his wife and her lover only Dirk kills him and then himself instead. For a short film - an hour twenty - it still felt like there was a lot of padding, especially Irene the beautiful wife having long long scenes of her singing in clubs, and also an equally long scene of a carnival in Rio. The only character with any common sense was Dirk, who spends half the film trying to persuade Paul that it's better to run away before they catch you and leave his unfaithful wife to do her own thing, in between proclaiming and comprehensively demontrating his undying loyalty. Paul relies on him but really needed to learn to listen to him and clearly would have done much better married to Dirk than to Irene.

Saturday 18/07/2026

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 11:54 am
lhune: (3L)
[personal profile] lhune posting in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day
1) Visit to the library

2) Already did a job I had planned for tomorrow, an early strike trough on my to-do-list. Yay

3) Clean bedlinen for tonight

Boring

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 09:47 am
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 
"Ai is already becoming boring" says an article in France 24.

The initial thrill, the initial panic are dying down because this always happens with new tech. Look and see how hysterical the opinion makers and authoritiy figures were about the introduction of telegraphy, railways and radio. They prophesied a New Age or the End of Civilisation as we know it. But human beings are adaptable. Give us a new gadget and we'll go "Oh Yeah!" and then we'll test it, try it out, become accustomed to what it can and can't do, accept its limitations, add it to the tool box- and carry on with our working lives.

You may have noticed that I've stopped posting AI pictures. I found my ability to generate them thrilling for a year (or was it two?) and then, quite suddenly, the magic evaporated. I still like the my pixel-pix but I've no wish to make any more. Indeed, I no longer seem able to. I've tried and the results have been at worst awful, at best- well, yes- boring.

Been there, done that, bought the T shirt......

If the urge returns I'll get out my water colours.....

Same thing happens with ideas..... 

[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by Amanda

Image

Book Beat aims to highlight other books that we may hear about through friends, social media, or other sources. We could see a gorgeous ad! Or find a new-to-us author on a list of underrated romances! Think of Book Beat as Teen Beat or Tiger Beat, but for books. And no staples to open to get the fold-out poster.

I Will Kill Your Imaginary Friend for $200

I Will Kill Your Imaginary Friend for $200 by Robert Brockway

Author: Robert Brockway
Released: January 27, 2026 by Page Street Horror
Genre:

To bright and anxious eight-year-old Kay Washington, the worst thing in the world is being alone with the quiet. That’s why Eddie Video makes the perfect imaginary He’s smart, he’s loud, he loves pulling pranks, and he’s always there to chase away the silence.

To mid-forties, down-on-his-luck Ivan, the worst thing in the world happened when he lost his imaginary friend. Now cursed with the ability to see everyone else’s, Ivan makes a living by killing the imaginary friends of adults who couldn’t let go. But when one of Eddie Video’s “pranks” goes too far, Ivan agrees to make an exception and help Kay.

Only Ivan will soon learn that Eddie Video is nothing like the talking ostriches, star bears, and goblin princesses he’s encountered in the past, and it’s going to take a lot more than clumsy haymakers and steak knives to bring him down. A balance of comedy and catharsis, this dual-narrative tackles both the fear of growing up and the scars our childhood leaves behind.

As someone who had a fondness for the movie Drop Dead Fred, I’m curious about this horror novel. 

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

The Poet Empress

The Poet Empress by Shen Tao

Author: Shen Tao
Released: January 20, 2026 by Bramble
Genre:

Debut author Shen Tao introduces readers to the lush, deadly world of The Poet Empress, a sweeping, epic and intimate fantasy perfect for fans of The Serpent & the Wings of Night, The Song of Achilles and She Who Became the Sun.

In the waning years of the Azalea Dynasty, the emperor is dying, the land consumed by famine, and poetry magic lost to all except the powerful.

Wei Yin is desperate. After the fifth death of a sibling, with her family and village on the brink of starvation, she will do anything to save those she loves.

Even offer herself as concubine to the cruel heir of the beautiful and brutal Azalea House.

But in a twist of fate, the palace stands on the knife-edge of civil war with Wei trapped in its center…at the side of a violent prince.

To survive, Wei must harden her heart, rely on her wit, and become dangerous herself. Even if it means becoming a poet in a world where women are forbidden to read—and composing the most powerful spell of all. A ballad of death…and love.

The Poet Empress is an epic fantasy that explores darker themes, subjects, and scenes that may not be suitable for all readers. Please see the author’s content note at the beginning of the book.

I’ve heard this one is brutal and beautiful with courtly politics and an interesting magic system. 

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

The Sword of Light

The Sword of Light by Heather Graham

Author: Heather Graham
Released: October 14, 2025 by MIRA
Genre: , ,

Will fabled objects of myth be enough to defend their emerald isle?

The mystical Tuatha Dé Danann walked the hills of ancient Ireland long before the first Rí, or king, ever ruled the land. Before they stepped back to make way for mankind, they left behind objects of incredible power that would reveal themselves when most needed. When invaders from the North arrive, it feels like the moment that has long been foretold has finally come.

Deidre, the daughter of a Rí, and Kylin, the son of a Northman who found peace and a home in Éire, have little in common, until they begin seeing visions of these fantastical gifts. The revelation that a traitor exists among the many Irish kings forces them to work together using their newfound powers in defense of their homeland. As all they hold dear comes under threat, it may be more than just dreams that the two begin to share…

Romance legend Heather Graham joins the fantasy romance party. 

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

Thighs Wide Shut

Thighs Wide Shut by Hayley Fleming

Author: Hayley Fleming
Released: July 21, 2026 by The Dial Press
Genre: ,

A charming second-chance romance about a young woman determined to finally embrace vulnerability — A love letter to anyone who’s ever felt their body is a barrier to their happiness.

Emma thought her late twenties couldn’t get more complicated. But then she quit her teaching job and moved across the country—only to find herself living right below the man she tried for years to avoid.

Emma hasn’t seen Harrison since an explosive fight ended their college friendship and eliminated the possibility of anything more ever happening between them. Now that his apartment is right above hers, Emma is privy to every detail of his active (and noisy) dating life. She knows she has only herself to blame for their her inability to be honest with Harrison drove him away. It’s clear he’s moved on; why can’t she?

Presented with an opportunity to reignite the long-smoldering flames of their relationship, Emma realizes that to seize the moment, she will have to finally face the women’s health condition holding her back from intimacy and truly open up. But can she let her desires overcome the resistance in her mind and body?

Funny and tender, Thighs Wide Shut is an all-too-relatable story of how terrifying—and freeing—it is when we let our hearts take charge.

This romance is out next week and features a heroine with vaginismus.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

I am back from Seattle!

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 12:50 am
olivermoss: (Kraken)
[personal profile] olivermoss
Remember when I was supposed to go for an event like a month ago? Train was literally boarding when I had to cancel. The one thing the agent could do for me was to switch my ticket to today, and only today. I said sure. So, I just random had a round trip ticket for today.

My plans for the trip were: Finally see Gas Works Park, go to Gas Works Brewing, wander areas far from like Pike's Market and all that.

There is a lot of Seattle, and tragically I've seen very little of it.

Photo post and general DW catch up later, I am exhausted. But, I did go to the steampunky park:

Image

Then I sat in an adirondack chair drinking citrus sours, watching sea planes land and writing werewolf porn in a brewpub partially owned by a Kraken goalie.

Okay, I am going to go fall over dead.

Communities

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 01:40 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
America’s Most Overlooked Developer: Local Churches

As communities seek solutions to the housing crisis, many are overlooking a group of landowners positioned to create housing through local stewardship and incremental development. These property owners are some of the oldest community anchors, long-standing gathering spaces, and large sources of organized power and funding. They are faith institutions: the churches, synagogues, mosques, temples, and land they own. In neighborhoods across America, faith institutions are deeply rooted in their communities and located in areas with existing infrastructure, nearby schools and transit, where housing is needed the most. Those qualities make them uniquely suited to create small-scale housing that fits within existing neighborhoods and make a difference toward more housing opportunities.

Wildlife

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 01:00 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Endangered species lose one of their strongest legal protections

Federal agencies have rescinded a decades-old rule that treated the destruction of an endangered animal’s habitat as a form of harm under the Endangered Species Act.
Wrecking a forest, wetland or stream that a protected species depends on will no longer count, on its own, as illegally harming that animal.

The move clears the way for logging, energy drilling and other development on land where threatened species live. Development can proceed as long as the animals themselves are not killed or injured.

Because most species reach the endangered list as their habitat vanishes, conservation scientists say the rule removes one of the law’s strongest protections.



If you remove the habitat in which a species lives, one of two things will happen:

1) It will go extinct, which is what usually happens, which is harm.

2) If as many members as possible are captured to preserve, it will go extinct in the wild, which is also harm.

And these two methods are exactly how we've lost most recently extinct species.

Read more... )

Philosophical Questions: Humans

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 12:36 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
People have expressed interest in deep topics, so this list focuses on philosophical questions.

At what point is a technologically enhanced human not a human anymore?

Read more... )

Creative Jam

Saturday, July 18th, 2026 12:35 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
The July [community profile] crowdfunding Creative Jam is now open with a theme of "Survival." Come give us prompts, or claim some for your own inspiration!


What I Have Written



From My Prompts


.
mrkinch: Erik holding fieldglasses in "Russia" (bins)
[personal profile] mrkinch
Our final Least Tern Watch shift was much less exciting than last week's, many fewer Terns although still several hundred including chicks of all sizes. Happily the only flyovers were Turkey Vultures and Osprey, neither a danger to the colony. So at the end of our three hours we said good-bye and good luck to the Least Terns and went looking for Elegant Terns out at Antenna Pier. We could see them, but not well enough for U's County list, but before we continued on to Elsie Roemer I took a picture for [personal profile] wellinghall. USS Hornet and an Alameda-San Francisco ferry )

At Elsie Roemer we found Elegant Terns and a number of other species, more than I expected in July, including a few Least Terns.:) A short list: )

The Black-bellied Plovers were in beautiul breeding plumage. Last stop of Arrowhead Marsh in hopes of the Cackling Goose that had been reported. No luck, but again there were more birds than I feared there would be. Another short list: )

Most surprising were the two aechmophorous Grebes floating out in San Leandro Bay. Most fun was hearing the racket from the Barn Swallow nests under the boardwalk.

Daily Happiness

Friday, July 17th, 2026 08:19 pm
torachan: maru the cat giving the side eye (maru side eye)
[personal profile] torachan
1. Well, I was going to go in to work today because I have a weekly meeting with my supervisor, but just as I was starting to get ready to go, he messaged me and said if I still wasn't feeling well, we could skip the meeting and I could stay home, so I took him up on the offer. I am feeling mostly recovered, no more congestion, but the cough is lingering and I did have trouble sleeping again last night due to uncontrolled coughing, so I was glad not to feel like I had to force myself to go in just for that one meeting.

2. Last night I walked up to the library and then continued on to Whole Foods to see if they had anything appealing for dessert and I found they have magic cookie bars from their bakery and they don't have walnuts! When I've made them at home, I always leave out the nuts because I am not a fan of nuts in most baked goods, and especially not walnuts, which have such an overpowering flavor to me, but any time I've seen them elsewhere they've always got walnuts. These do have pecans, but that's acceptable, if not ideal. They are really delicious, actually. I would buy them again. (It was a pack of four, so I have dessert tonight, too.)

3. Carla's train seems to be reporting on time and she should be here in about twelve hours. I'm so glad she was able to get out of the Chicago area before the smoke.

4. Molly wants to know why I'm taking her picture.

Image

Today's Adventures

Friday, July 17th, 2026 09:58 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today we went out running errands and grocery shopping.

Read more... )

1 pinch hit left, (hopefully) final extension

Friday, July 17th, 2026 09:44 pm
longficmod: Photo of a woman tying a running shoe (Default)
[personal profile] longficmod posting in [community profile] fandom5k
All but one pinch hit is claimed! To accommodate the pinch hitters' schedules, I am announcing what I hope will be the final delay. I recognize this is quite a long time to wait, and thank you all for your patience--it's a key part of this exchange that everyone who turns in an assignment receives one of their own.

The deadline for this pinch hit is 22:59 US Eastern time on Friday, 31 July, and the new reveals time is 22:59 US Eastern on Saturday, 1 August.

As mentioned before, I'd very much appreciate any help finding other places to advertise the final pinch hit, such as fandom-specific discords I may not have access to.

If you can't take this pinch hit but are interested in treating, or are pinch hitting yourself, please have a look at our our treats for pinch hitters post! Fills for these requests are particularly appreciated--pinch hitters are, as always, the heroes of this exchange.

Reposts on Tumblr are also welcome!

PDPH 11 (medium varies by relationship) - The Amazing World of Gumball, Osmosis Jones (2001), Dandy's World (Roblox) )


While we wait, this is an excellent time to do another sweep of your creations to check them against your recipient's DNWs, fix typos, and any other last-minute needs! I hope you're as excited as I am for reveals.
shadowkat: (Angry)
[personal profile] shadowkat
Well, sort of good news? I no longer have to worry about jury summons occurring when I'm trying to fly down to see my mother. more on this )

Found out today that Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey has been sold out for months in IMAX 70mm theaters, even though it literally opened today, with previews on Thursday.

People bought tickets in July 2025. For a movie. In 2025.

I'm guessing it's not sold out in regular IMAX and non-70mm. What's the big deal about 70mm IMAX? Nolan shoots his films in 70mm IMAX not 33mm like everyone else. Because he wants a specific definition to the film, and to ensure people see the film in a movie theater.

I don't know if I want to necessarily see it in IMAX. I read the San Francisco Gate's review - which included spoilers - and reminded me of what this story is actually about? I'd forgotten. I mean I knew generally speaking.

Some of the responses on social media to it are...well, puzzling? I didn't know people had issues with the casting choice of Elliot Page as Sinon, who is actually a minor role or cameo...

Poster: Elliot Page as Achilles is horrible, Brad Pitt was better.
Me: Elliot Page isn't playing Achilles - he is playing Sinon, Achilles doesn't appear in the Odyssey really. That's the Illiad. You are confusing the Illiad with the Odyssey.
Read more... )

A lot of folks don't appear to understand what the Odyssey is about? (I'm not sure James Joyce did when he wrote Ulysses, which is loosely based on the Odyssey, albeit the Roman translation.) what the Odysessy is about thematically )

In other news? Tickets are going on sale now for Avengers: Doomsday, which is dropping sometime in December. This blows my mind. I also find it irritating.

What also blows my mind is what they consider a flop now?

2026 Box Office Hits and Flops

It's all based on revenue. And whether the film made more than it's budget and by how much. And damn, there are some horrible flicks that were hits? Read more... )

***

Apparently the Doofus (aka our National Embarrassment) had a hissy fit because all the broadcast channels declined to air his speech about the 2020 election being rigged. (No, that was the 2024 election. I wonder if he knows that the vast majority of Americans think the 2024 election was rigged by him and Elon Musk?) I knew ABC and NBC did - NBC went out of its way not to mention him at all during it's Fourth of July coverage. I only watch ABC and NBC on cable now, and PBS. I am boycotting CBS and FOX. And, I don't have access any longer to NY1, stupid Optimum.

***

Everyone was gone today at work - I had my area to myself. So I didn't have my earphones on most of the day. It was quiet. I was bored. Work is incredibly slow and boring at the moment. Even Breaking Bad is bored. He took today off. I spend most of my time playing on my phone, playing with a spreadsheet, playing with electronic filing, or playing on the internet - mainly just reading articles about movies, television shows, books, and haunted places around the world. I don't handle boredom well - it makes me irritable. I like to be busy and productive. It's a good thing I have jury duty coming up. That way I can at least read a book while waiting around for someone to call me. I have a lot of books to read. It shouldn't be an issue finding one.

**

They were screaming on Threads today. I think it was threads. Read more... )
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