sovay: (Sydney Carton)
[personal profile] sovay
Exiled for the second night running on account of the bustedassedness of our air conditioning, I have been self-medicating with college radio, old movies, and pulp novels. WUMB netted me Cordelia's Dad's "Granite Mills" (1998) and WHRB Thanks for Coming's "Friends Forever" (2020). Killer Shark (1950) is pretty much the other way round from its title with its setting of the mid-century shark fishery in the Gulf of California, but its call-it-courage adventure makes a cute B-showcase for Roddy McDowall just aged out of his child stardom, all his scene-stealer's tilts and flickers in place even if he was directed to give his best shot at sounding like an all-American teen. Night Nurse (1931) remains one of my favorite and endlessly watchable pre-Codes: steel-true Stanwyck, Blondell cracking gum and wise, and Ben Lyon as the sweetest bootlegger in the business, the kind of romantic hero who lets the heroine take the lead while he takes her at her word. Nancy Rutledge's Blood on the Cat (1945) does contain a most excellent black cat, tester of gravity, router of dogs, unendangered throughout the novel despite its human body count. The number of monarch caterpillars is now something like sixteen.

Mighty Contests

Jul. 17th, 2025 08:02 am
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 I made peace with the guy next door. It satisfied him that I was prepared to stand and listen to him (on the other side of a low wall ) while he presented his case against Damian. Listening was all I did- and I made no comment except to say we'd always been happy with the work Damian has done for us.

As I was writing the last sentence this line of Pope slipped into my head....

"What mighty contests rise from trivial things...."

(no subject)

Jul. 16th, 2025 02:22 pm
lycomingst: (Default)
[personal profile] lycomingst
The other night I stayed up until dawn watching Agents of Shield season 4. It had alternative reality and they know my sweet spot. I couldn’t stop. But I noticed something about my tv. It was so dark that I couldn’t even see who was hitting who.

I moved my smaller tv in from the living room. I don’t watch in there because the electronics are on the floor until I spring for a table. So I hooked it up and yes, my other tv is dying of creeping dark. Testing it involved sorting out about 5 remotes. And then finding the one I needed on the kitchen counter where I randomly put it down as I was to and froing.

I’m debating buying a new, cheap Roku tv.

Danger-wee

Jul. 16th, 2025 10:11 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

Today was just one thing after another: work, with chores like laundry interspersed, then tidying the shed and putting the camping stuff back in it, then getting a haircut, then getting back just in time to help with the second half of dinner-making, then going with D to his girlfriend's house where we ended up going on a trek to find a new light bulb for her bathroom.

Her other partner overhearing the conversation about the need for a new bulb and coming into the room with us saying "We've been danger weeing for a few days now, haven't we love?"

We were able to find a light bulb of the correct size and fitting, and D sorted it out before we came home. The two of them were so grateful.

So for all my accomplishments of the day, the best might be that I've played a small part in preventing people from having to wee in the dark. Which is especially valuable when P is still on crutches!

Still fangirling six days later

Jul. 16th, 2025 12:37 pm
cupcake_goth: (sparklefang)
[personal profile] cupcake_goth
The MCR concert was amazing. They are performing the entire album of The Black Parade, but they've turned it into a weird theatre show with a different storyline than the usual album. The theme is kinda-sorta a fever dream of cold war Russia? With the band being state ordered performers to distract the masses? There's a mock election that the audience participates in, there's a "state official" who comes on stage to hand Gerard some sort of papers that Gerard rips up, there's fire, there's flashing lights, and it's all very weird and fantastic.

The band themselves were obviously having a fantastic time. Ray Toro (lead guitar) kept smiling all night, and Gerard was glorying in his punk rock theatre kid dream. And the sound for the show was some of the best mix I've heard at concerts. 

After they finished with The Black Parade, the encore was songs from their other albums, letting them flail around even more. The high points for me were "Heaven Help Us" (a b-side from The Black Parade), and my two favorite songs from their first album, "Our Lady of Sorrows", and "Vampires Will Never Hurt You". MY SONG THEY PLAYED MY FAVORITE SONG. I was hoping for "Thank You for the Venom", but the other three songs made up for it.

In other words, MY G-D the show was amazing, and I am ecstatic that I'm going to SF this weekend to see them a second time. 

(Oh, and Gerard is still cute. My precious rock star crush object!)

Moving On

Jul. 16th, 2025 10:09 am
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 O look! There's the Moon. Ghostly in the morning light, And already half eaten. It seems only the other day we were talking about Full Moon in Capricorn. Is Time actually speeding up? Some say it is.....

The US Administration seems to think that it's enough to say, "Never was a client list." What they forget is that Homo Sapiens Sapiens is a cunning and curious little monkey that likes nothing better than to poke its nose where it's been told it shouldn't. "Ooh a mystery! Let me at it!" It's why detective stories are so popular...

Now that Damian is actually working on the garage conversion we've been moving out the last of the things we've been storing in there. Neither of the babies in our family has any use for the high chair but who knows what the future may bring and neither us has any present use for the bathroom perching stool but who knows what the future may bring- so into the attic they go. The attic, which I cleared out a year ago- is getting full up again. Some of the shit stuff in there isn't even ours but is being stored for Terry who has probably forgotten that we have it....

Tuesday, 15th July 2025

Jul. 15th, 2025 02:51 pm
beck_liz: The TARDIS in space (DW - TARDIS in Space)
[personal profile] beck_liz posting in [community profile] doctor_who_sonic
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Picture Diary 98

Jul. 15th, 2025 06:25 pm
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 Picture Diary 98

1. Good cop, bad cop

NYAIk7DwyM59MGFtfqve--0--xq48q.jpeg

2. Fairy godmother

MZ8xgvX9LZcSXVczr4iC--0--w8715.jpeg

3. Scarab

B6TFUOMUDCLCftPqWE9z--0--kabey.jpeg

4. Dawn patrol

9OTnKiM8NBYslgV7Smha--0--1fwvs.jpeg

5 The white dress

9RgbRwBzmMXKRz5AVlAk--0--qu2e8.jpeg

6. And who are you, exactly?

X9v0rRmAnNRKd3glaBBT--0--9cdbl.jpeg

Pan And.....

Jul. 15th, 2025 10:14 am
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo

IMG_8212.jpeg

This is an antique copy of a very popular classical statue known variously as Pan and Olympus and Pan and Daphnis. We know it was popular because we possess so many versions of it. From what I've seen, this version- at Petworth House- is one of the better ones. 

Pan is teaching his protege Olympus or Daphnis to play the Pan pipes. The original was created c. 100 CE-and- on the basis of an inconclusive passage in Pliny- has been attributed to a sculptor called Heliodorus of Rhodes.

These days we treat antique statues as archaeology and- apart from cleaning them up- leave them pretty much as found- but the 18th century thought of them as art and had no qualms about making them as good as new. The Earl of Egremont's statue passed through the hands of a couple of Italian restorers before achieving its present form-  and I'm not competent to say how much of it is original. One thing I do know is that Daphnis/Olympus was found without a head- and the one he now wears once belonged to a quite different statue. It's remarkable how well it fits.....
sovay: (Claude Rains)
[personal profile] sovay
Because I am more familiar with the operas than the film scores of Erich Wolfgang Korngold and tend to avoid even famous movies with Ronald Reagan in them, it took until tonight for me to hear the main theme for Kings Row (1942), at which point the entire career of John Williams flashed before my eyes. Other parts of the score sound more recognizably, symphonically of their era, but that fanfare is a blast from the future it directly shaped: the standard set by Korngold's tone-poem, leitmotiv-driven approach to film composing, principal photography as the libretto to an opera. I love finding these taproots, even when they were lying around in plain sight.

I don't think that what I feel for the sea is nostalgia, but I am intrigued by this study indicating that generally people do: "Searching for Ithaca: The geography and psychological benefits of nostalgic places" (2025). I am surprised that more people are not apparently bonded to deserts or mountains or woodlands. Holidays by the sea can't explain all of it. I used to spend a lot of my life in trees.

I napped for a couple of hours this afternoon, but my brain could return any time now. The rest of my week is not conducive to doing nothing. The rest of the world is not conducive to losing time.
sovay: (Morell: quizzical)
[personal profile] sovay
My week seems to have started with catapulting myself on zero sleep to a specialist's appointment starting half an hour from the end of the phone call, so I am eating a bagel with lox and trying not to feel that the earth acquires a new axial tilt every time I turn my head. Paying bills, shockingly, has not improved my mood.

After enjoying both The Big Pick-Up (1955) and The Flight of the Phoenix (1964), I was disappointed by Elleston Trevor's The Burning Shore (U.S. The Pasang Run, 1961), which ironically for its airport setting never really seemed to get its plot off the ground and in any case its ratio of romantic melodrama and ambient racism to actual aviation was not ideal, but I am a little sorry that it was not adapted for film like its fellows, since I would have liked to see the casting for the initially peripheral, ultimately book-stealing role of Tom Thorne, the decorated and disgraced surgeon gone in the Conradian manner to ground in the tropics, because of his unusual fragility: it is de rigueur for his archetype that he should pull himself out of his opium-mired death-spiral for the sake of a passenger flight downed in flames, but he remains an impulsive suicide risk even when his self-respect should conventionally have been restored. He is described as having the face of a hurt clown. He'd have been any character actor's gift.

Mostly I like that Wolf Alice named themselves after the short story by Angela Carter, but the chorus of "The Sofa" (2025) really is attractive right now.

Read The Psalms

Jul. 14th, 2025 09:27 am
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 "Put not your trust in princes" says the psalmist. A lot of people will have voted for Trump (some with clothes pegs on their noses) because of his promise to "drain the swamp" and publish the Epstein files. I'm not going to speculate on why he has suddenly reneged on that promise, simply observe that in doing so he has delivered his followers a valuable political- and Biblical- lesson....

(no subject)

Jul. 13th, 2025 08:08 pm
lycomingst: (Default)
[personal profile] lycomingst
The Friday Five


1. What was the most sick that you've ever been?
I used to get terrible sore throats when I was young. They got worse every year. The last time I got delusional. When I could afford it I had my tonsils out and I swear I didn’t have a cold for 10 years.

2. What disease are you afraid of getting?
Lyme disease.

3. Are you a big baby when it comes to taking medicine/shots for your illnesses?
No.

4. Is going to the doctor really THAT bad?
Yes.

5. Would you have the flu twice a month if you were paid $1,000 for having it?
Maybe for $10,000 but I don’t come cheap.

Bucky Benny and Dwight

Jul. 13th, 2025 07:54 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

My parents showed me a picture of their new garden gnomes. They found one playing the drums first and got it, and then my mom found these others to make the rest of the gnome band.

My dad pointed to each one and told me, "Bucky the drummer, and the singer is his brother Benny, and then there's their friend Dwight." He's so funny, such a quiet guy but he comes up with these goofy things sometimes. Mom was mocking him for this. He just went along, telling me the names of "all my gnomes in the backyard, Paul and Tessa together. And I can't remember what the other two names are..."

I didn't know they had any gnomes, and it turns out they have a whole crowd now! With names!

(no subject)

Jul. 13th, 2025 11:23 am
lycomingst: (Default)
[personal profile] lycomingst
We’re having a spate of hot days, 100F/37C, then it will cool down. The mobile home park had to shut down the water on Friday as something broke. The system is old and a piece needs replacing and it needs hunting down.. Management had to choose between no water and telling everyone to keep a faucet open to regulate the pressure. They decided on the latter one which is painful to anyone who lived with drought. But better than no water.

I have strawberries ripening, actually strawberries. I have to hang pots on the fence because those I had in pots on the ground got munched on. I keep them there as decoys. The tomatoes are soso. I think I watered too much. Or this type doesn’t grow as tall as I am used to. But the cucumber has a flower on it and soon I will have a round, light green ball of a cucumber.

Even the butterfly bush plant I got from the Arbor Day Society is growing and I thought I killed that.

Photo cross-post

Jul. 13th, 2025 07:24 am
andrewducker: (Default)
[personal profile] andrewducker


My primate family.

The exhibition at the museum is very quiet and rather good. Recommended!
Original is here on Pixelfed.scot.

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