Mod Post: Off-Topic Tuesday

Sep. 9th, 2025 08:31 am
icon_uk: Mod Squad icon (Mod Squad)
[personal profile] icon_uk posting in [community profile] scans_daily
In the comments to these weekly posts (and only these posts), it's your chance to go as off topic as you like.

Talk about non-comics stuff, thread derail, and just generally chat among yourselves.

The intent of these posts is to chat and have some fun and, sure, vent a little as required. Reasoned debate is fine, as always, but if you have to ask if something is going over the line, think carefully before posting please.

Normal board rules about conduct and behaviour still apply, of course.

It's been suggested that, if discussing spoilers for recent media events, it might be advisable to consider using the rot13 method to prevent other members seeing spoilers in passing.

The world situation is the world situation. If you're following the news, you know it as much as I do, if you're not, then there are better sources than scans_daily. But please, no doomscrolling, for your own sake.

There are about a half dozen, deeply concerning, US political points I could make on healthcare and vaccines alone (to pick a subject at random), but I suspect you don't me to raise them.

British bargain-bin-Trump-wannabe Farage, appeared in front of a committee in the US Congress, it did not go well for him, though it has to be noted that the UK media did not cover the excoriation bit much, which is a shame.

Those missing Star Trek Prodigy may (or may not) be consoled at knowing there is a new animated Trek in town, albeit one with a rather different target audience, "Star Trek Scouts" . I can't wait for TrekCultures "Ups and Downs" on THIS one! :)

And this weekend JemCon seemed like a good time to release the new synthwave re-recording of "Glitter and Gold"

A new LEGO Batman video game from Traveller's Tales is coming!!

Starman (1988) #15

Sep. 9th, 2025 07:53 am
iamrman: (Carol)
[personal profile] iamrman posting in [community profile] scans_daily

Writer: Roger Stern

Pencils: Tom Lyle

Inks: Bob Smith


Starman fights a super-powered hitman named Deadline.


Read more... )

sovay: (Jeff Hartnett)
[personal profile] sovay
I wish merely to register my pleasure that when I went looking for the uncredited actor playing the dean of the law school in the early scenes of Winterset (1936), I found that Murray Kinnell had the kind of Wikipedia biographer who includes short reviews with their subject's stage and screen resume. "An unusual role for Kinnell as a derelict one-time gentleman; the film opened in July 1931." "'No man is a hero to his valet', as Kinnell's character in this murder mystery could testify." "Kinnell as yet another butler, though this time with an unexpected flourish." I am much more used to finding this kind of partisanship on social media: with no prior attachment to an actor whom I did not notice previously in a handful of pre-Codes, just its enthusiasm makes me want to see these lovingly noted small parts even when a non-zero quantity of Charlie Chan seems to be involved. I hope Kinnell would have appreciated his future, however microscopic fandom.

Daily Happiness

Sep. 8th, 2025 11:25 pm
torachan: karkat from homestuck headdesking (karkat headdesk)
[personal profile] torachan
1. Today marks one full week since I decided to start taking an early morning walk. I have been enjoying it very much and it currently works with my sleep and work schedules, so I'll be keeping it up. We've been in the habit of taking an evening walk every day for years, and a year or so I ago started making it two walks a day on weekends, but I'd never tried to make it a daily thing.

2. Today I actually took a walk at lunch as well, but I'm not sure how often I'll do that, at least in this weather. It was cooler than it has been, but still in the low 80s, and the area around my work doesn't have a lot of shady streets so I was in direct sun most of the time and ended up getting back to work sweatier than I'd prefer, but I did stop at 85C and get a delicious lavender taro latte on my way, so that was nice. I will definitely be taking a lunchtime walk on cooler days, and maybe even some not so cool days, depending on how I feel. It felt good to get up from my desk for more than just a quick run to the restroom or to go downstairs and buy a drink (I do get up for a few minutes every hour, but it's still a lot of sitting).

3. We had a nice dinner at Disneyland. The park was actually not that crowded and the weather was really pleasant (we didn't get down there until around eight, so the sun was down, but it wasn't as muggy as it has been the last few times we've been at night, including Saturday) and even traffic getting down there was pretty light.

4. Woke up to find Gemma in bed with me the other morning. Usually it's Molly!

Sail Off Into The Night

Sep. 8th, 2025 10:26 pm
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
Started off spooky season by seeing Lost Boys on the big screen, on an original print of the film. Original, and very beat up.



It was cool to see it on the big screen. Visually, the movie is stunning. Not in an 'every frame a picture' sort of a way. The individual compositions are okay, but the visual storytelling is impressive.

I saw some people from book club and sat with them. They were out as a group for someone's birthday, so I accidentally crashed his birthday, but it was chill. Then, the bus home didn't seem to exist, so I took a Lyft home.

the Royal Purrcy

Sep. 9th, 2025 12:16 am
mecurtin: face of tuxedo tabby cat Purrcy looking smugly happy (purrcy face)
[personal profile] mecurtin
At one point Purrcy was looking very regal as he stre-e-e-e-etched his arms out in front of him & crossed his paws, but by the time I got over to take his picture his expression was kind of vacant. That probably just makes it more authentically royal.

Purrcy the tuxedo tabby sits on the back of a brown sofa, stretching his arms out in front of him almost as long as his entire body and crossing his paws delicately at the end.

What I Did on My Summer Vacation

Sep. 9th, 2025 12:01 am
mecurtin: 3 of GRRM's Hugo Award statues (hugos)
[personal profile] mecurtin
Beth and I went to Worldcon! And then spent another week in Seattle.

I had a great time at Worldcon, much better than last year at Glasgow where I spent almost all my time at the Business Meeting That Would Not Die. This year all but one short session of the BM was held online & ahead of time, it was *great*. A bunch of the Usual Suspects complained that the online meeting was scheduled Against the Rules and we should have been able to vote about it (and wait another year) but I say, meh, this way I got Worldcon back & also attendance was 3 times as high as at regular Business Meetings, so there.

Beth put her foot down & said I couldn't go to Worldcon without getting a scooter, and she was completely right. In the first place, any venue that can hold 6-10K people has really long halls, that's just math. In the second place, downtown Seattle is REALLY hilly.

The con wasn't able to rent scooters (due to competition from cruises) so I rented one myself that was brought to the hotel, and wow ... it's been decades since I've had that sense of freedom and speed. Once I got an experienced scooter-driver to tell me how to get in&out of elevators, that is. I'm seriously considering bringing a scooter-costume to LACon, dressing the scooter up as a rocket ship, because you can go really fast down the hallway (if it's mostly empty, of course).

It's so cool! And it's been so long, so very long since moving around has been anything but painful & draining for me, it was really freeing to have it be *fun*.

Martha Wells was the Worldcon Guest of Honor, so she spoke a bunch of times and I was one of a big crowd of people following her around like ... not ducklings, ducklings don't travel in enormous mobs. Devotees, anyway. And we got together and talked, and shared stickers and things, & talked about Murderbut & her other works.

And WOW, I was seriously shocked & disappointed at how many fen over the age of 50 seem incapable of not calling Murderbot "he", wtf. Although Mr Dr Science consistently starts off using they/them, then has to correct himself.

In addition to Martha Wells, I went to panels on "Food in History—The Impact of Spice" (packed to the gunwales! it was great), "Beyond the Torment Nexus" (even more packed, people sitting on the floor), "Centuries of Marriage" (disappointingly centered on Western Europe in the last 500 years, except Shauna Lawless had good info on Ireland c 11th-12th c, with much more marriage flexibility than WEur standard). Maybe I went to others? It's kind of a blur.

I saw [personal profile] gwyn ! I saw [personal profile] seekingferret ! I saw [personal profile] bethbethbeth ! there were probably other people but cons make my brain kind of mushy. And there were a bunch of other people who aren't on DW, too.

I got to cruise through the dealer's room and chat with vendors every time I bought something. I made several passes through the Art Show to look and to bid on some small things -- I'm under orders from Mr Dr not to get more things that go on walls until I find more walls to put them on. I chatted with people about the upcoming Worldcons in LA (Anaheim) & Montreal, and possible ones in Edmonton, Brisbane, and Dublin. It's doing to be a LONG time after LA before there's another one in the US, folks.

We stayed in Seattle for another week after Worldcon. One of the things I did was travel to West Seattle and have lunch with [personal profile] gwyn under relaxed conditions, which was really nice. Then toward the weekend I went out toward Bellevue and stayed there for a few days, including finally meeting [personal profile] cruisedirector & her husband, after knowing them online for *decades*. It was great to see them at last, and their Home By The Lake, and to talk about life and fandom for a few hours.

A plan to get together with a bunch of people from college got cancelled when the hostess came down with covid, but that just meant I had a bit more time to rest & write up a few things before getting Beth, dropping off the car, and heading back to the airport for a frankly exhausting trip back. Beth & I continue our NOVID record: we didn't mask *all* the time, just in most of the crowded situations (airport, airplane aka flying virus box, inside crowded rooms at con), on Whale Watch boat. Oh, we saw orcas! They were super cool, totally worth it.

The cat was *very* glad to see us. Mr Dr was, too: he did better at taking care of himself than he'd been last year, while still failing at some tasks.

Nomination Clarifications 2

Sep. 12th, 2025 04:52 am
flowing_river: (Default)
[personal profile] flowing_river posting in [community profile] aspecex
Reminder to make sure your relationship and character nominations are disambiguated with the fandom name in parenthesis after the tag. Incorrectly formatted nominations will be rejected if they are not corrected.

Freeforms

Delayed-onset demisexuality after sexual relationship is established - Can the nominator explain what they mean with this freeform? Could this be reworded to be more clear?

Teenage realisations - This is a bit too vague, can it be updated to something like "Teenage Aspec Realizations"?
fanweeklymod: (Default)
[personal profile] fanweeklymod posting in [community profile] fandomweekly
Here are the entries for this week's challenge:

List of entries )

In order to vote, please reply to this post using the form provided. All comments are screened, and entries are listed in the order they were submitted. For your vote to qualify, you must fill out your entire voting card (all three spots) in order to be counted. First place votes are worth 3 points, second place votes are worth 2 points, and third place votes are worth 1 point. Meeting the bonus goal on an entry gets an extra point for that submission.

When voting, please copy/paste the ENTRY NUMBER and the FIC TITLE from the list above into the spot you're voting for (this prevents accidentally mis-numbering a vote and casting it for the wrong entry). It should look like this:

First Place: 61. Fic Title Here
Second Place: 88. Another Fic Title
Third Place: 47. Finally a third fic title goes here

Please note that you cannot vote for your own entry, and that votes cannot be made anonymously. You do not have to be a member of the community in order to vote, nor have submitted an entry for this week; everyone is welcome to participate in the voting. IP addresses are logged to prevent duplicate voting.



Voting closes Wednesday, September 10, at 9:00PM EST.

Close. Ish.

Sep. 9th, 2025 03:29 am
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
[personal profile] davidgillon
 I had one of those login challenges: someone in X is trying to log into your account, if it's you enter the code we just sent.
I'm used to X being well outside the local area, but the latest one sets a new record. Rather than Kent it was "someone in East Kilbride", so outskirts of Glasgow and only 435 miles out!

Status report

Sep. 8th, 2025 09:02 pm
soc_puppet: Butt-end view of an agouti rat laying on its back, holding the stem of a pink flower to signify that it has shuffled off this mortal coil (drama hound) (Drama llama)
[personal profile] soc_puppet
[community profile] pokepodproject fics:
- Xatu: Posted!
- Sneasel: First draft finished! Up next: Typing

[community profile] summerofthe69:
- Fest closed for the year
- Amnesty period open

Homework:
- Keeping up with it 👍
- Good grades so far ✌

Socchan in general:
- Uh...
- Uhhhhh...

(I think it's mostly not getting quite enough sleep? Plus, you know, the background fascism. I read ahead in one of my textbooks, and I'm taking this upcoming Sunday off, so that should help some. Also, Sot69 is done for the year, so I don't have to worry about or work on that at all. Once PokéPod is done, I'll have no major fandom obligations that I can't just schedule posts for, so I'm hoping that I'll be doing better in two weeks.)

The Island of Constant Death

Sep. 8th, 2025 08:20 pm
yourlibrarian: Angel and Spike Speak no Evil (BUF-SpeakNoEvil-preetybird)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian
1) During a recent episode of Death in Paradise it struck us how apt the lyrics of Hotel California were for anyone visiting Saint Marie. Read more... )

2) Rather puzzling what is and is not available on Britbox. I was amused by the caption for the show Landward as "the long running series" when only 2 seasons, from two non-consecutive years, are available. I was also sad that For the Love of Dogs is a continuing show but Britbox only has up until 2016 available. (Shame about Paul O'Grady, who I'd not heard of before seeing the series, but who died still making it in 2023).

3) Another Silent Witness guest star back from the dead in a different role. Mrs. Hall From All Creatures. I noticed that they went all out for S20, with a costly and pivotal final episode. Read more... )

4) Teaching students to fact check might be the best way to teach them to reason about what they're reading.

5) More travel photos of Agate Beach sunsets, Oregon trees and flowers and the McKenzie River.

Poll #33589 Kudos Footer-539
This poll is anonymous.
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 8

Want to leave a Kudos?

View Answers

Kudos!
8 (100.0%)



[#272] Unspoken (Control)

Sep. 8th, 2025 08:54 pm
a_little_apocalypse: (until i feel something)
[personal profile] a_little_apocalypse posting in [community profile] fandomweekly
Theme Prompt: #272 - Choose Your Battles
Title: Unspoken
Fandom: Control
Rating/Warnings: M, Trench/Darling
Bonus: No
Word Count: 821
Summary: There are things, still, that Trench can't say to Darling.

Unspoken )

[#272] on the precipice (Control)

Sep. 8th, 2025 08:43 pm
a_little_apocalypse: (what's done can't be undone)
[personal profile] a_little_apocalypse posting in [community profile] fandomweekly
Theme Prompt: #272 - Choose Your Battles
Title: On The Precipice
Fandom: Control
Rating/Warnings: PG13 | Spoilers
Bonus: No
Word Count: 997
Summary: Trench remembers his days on the field fondly.

On The Precipice )

(no subject)

Sep. 8th, 2025 08:20 pm
seekingferret: Two warning signs one above the other. 1) Falling Rocks. 2) Falling Rocs. (Default)
[personal profile] seekingferret
from a member of my shul, and I think this is AWESOME

Daily Check-in

Sep. 8th, 2025 06:10 pm
starwatcher: Western windmill, clouds in background, trees around base. (Default)
[personal profile] starwatcher posting in [community profile] fandom_checkin
 
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Monday, June September 08, to midnight on Tuesday, September 09. (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #33588 Daily Check-in
This poll is closed.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 28

How are you doing?

I am OK.
18 (64.3%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now.
10 (35.7%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single.
9 (33.3%)

One other person.
13 (48.1%)

More than one other person.
5 (18.5%)




Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
 
pumpkinkingmod: (pic#8274963)
[personal profile] pumpkinkingmod posting in [community profile] trickortreatex
Nominations are closed, but please don't worry if your tags haven't been processed yet. The schedule includes three days for me to finish that up before signups open :)

If I have any questions about the lingering tags, I'll make a clarification post, so stay tuned!

Hearts and flowers

Sep. 8th, 2025 04:47 pm
offcntr: (Default)
[personal profile] offcntr
Got a last-minute commission from a long-time patron. Could I do a couple of pie plates as wedding presents? Two of her nephews were getting married this fall. (Not to each other. That would be weird.)

She wanted them decorated with hearts, with [initials] + [initials] and [date]. So not my style.

I asked if I could zhuzh it up a bit--make the hearts from intertwined branches or flowering vines, add some birdies. Oh yes, that would be lovely.

Also got an order from another customer--could a make a dessert plate featuring juvenile blue jays? Stellars, Scrub, Eastern, I asked? Stellars and Eastern, she said.

Of course they'd never be in the same ecosystem, but aren't they cute?




Out of order

Sep. 8th, 2025 04:43 pm
offcntr: (Default)
[personal profile] offcntr
The last two firings, cone 9 has started bending before cone 8, contrary to the natural order. I mentioned it in the shop, and Jon and Linda said they'd seen it too. I noticed that the cone 8's are a new box, while the 9's are an early generation, probably inherited from another retiring potter. I wonder if Orton has changed the formula?

Doesn't really matter that much to me, as cone 10 is the goal. It's just unsettling to see my nicely organized line of cones fall out of sequence.

Shrug

Sep. 8th, 2025 04:20 pm
offcntr: (mktbear)
[personal profile] offcntr
After a week like I'd had, even a cold, grey, under-performing Saturday Market feels like a respite.

I came in $2.70 in the red, commission from an un-recorded sale on Labor Day, and it took forever to make my first sale. At which point, I was still 20¢ in the hole.

It was another football day, this time against Oklahoma State. Not a lot of visitors this time, and with orange jerseys reading OSU, they might as well have been from Corvallis. Not a lot of visitors, period. I don't think I finally made it into the black, with another mug sale, until nearly noon.

I have a new teddy bear, courtesy of EBay, who joined me at Market, so I got to introduce her to my neighbors, who tolerate my eccentricities, as well as any kids and child-like adults that visited the booth. One such group, mom, dad and daughter had a nice time playing with the bear, then bought an octopus large batter bowl and small bear--appropriately--cookie jar, picked out by the little girl, as gifts.

Remember the couple who bee-lined into my booth last week and bought a couple of tumblers? They said they'd be back again this week, and actually were. Well, she was; he was working. But she'd brought a friend, bought another couple of tumblers and my last large colander. And the friend, who'd never seen my work before, was inspired to but a full table setting, dinner and dessert plates, soup bowl, tall mug. In ten minutes, they doubled my sales total for the day.

I sometimes wonder why I keep at this pottery thing, especially on slow days. But people like these folks, and the ones who stop in to tell me there recognize my work from Great Harvest or Empty Bowls, or use it all the time at home, make it worthwhile.

The sun finally came out around a quarter to three, and though I'd taken the precaution of putting up booth sides--rolled up--and keeping the empty boxes under cover, it never actually rained, so I'm counting it as a win. Sales-wise, it was the slowest day of the year, just under $400, but what the heck else would I be doing?

Shrug.


Challenging

Sep. 8th, 2025 03:39 pm
offcntr: (window bear)
[personal profile] offcntr
Last week was... challenging.

It's always stressful when we roll around into this time of year. Two big shows coming up, needing lots of work. Work that, as it happens, I'd already sold a lot of in August. There's also the issue of fitting in my committee responsibilities around the making and glazing of pots. I'm Graphics chair for both of the aforementioned shows, so have to save some energy and creativity--not to mention time--to design posters, postcards, ads and billboards. It's a lot.

But I felt for once I had a handle on things. I even finished the production run a little early, so I had a couple of extra days for the glazing. What could go wrong?

I first noticed something weird about my glaze the day I started glazing. There were some lumps of unmixed glaze, odd because I screened the whole works when I mixed up the new 20,000-gram batch in August. Didn't feel like getting my screen out, so I grabbed one in the kiln room and ran a bucket of glaze through it. And found a residue of speckled yellow sand in the screen.

This should not be there! Our raw materials are industrially processed, ground to powder and air-floated. Also, I'd screened the glazes once already. What the heck?

I briefly considered mixing an entire new batch of glaze, but we were out of one of the crucial materials, Zircopax--an opacifier, without which, my white glaze... isn't. So I started glazing.

When I got to the second bucket of glaze, I ran it through my usual screen with no residue, but it still felt weirdly gritty. Rescreening with the finer-mesh shop screen once again caught sand. I checked the bins of raw materials and didn't find anything amiss.

It wasn't until midweek, when I decided to fill up unused space in my last bisque firing by calcining more ball clay that I found the culprit. The top layer of the ball clay bin was a different color, yellowish, and when I rubbed some between my fingers, there was the grit. I scraped off as much as I could to get to the white clay at the bottom of the bin, and scooped out as clean a batch as I could.

I still couldn't mix up another batch, but realized I could maybe make do with Tin Oxide instead. It's much more expensive, but you only need half as much. I mixed up a 1000-gram test batch, glazed a bowl. Also glazed another in the suspect glaze, for comparison, took them home to fire to cone 9 in my electric kiln. The color would be wrong, but I could at least check whether things fused properly. At this point, I'd already glazed two-thirds of my bisque, and I was really hoping I wouldn't have to wash it off and start over. (Besides, there wouldn't be time--kiln is booked solid for the rest of the month.)

I spent all day Thursday either on the computer or catching up on errands while waiting, for the results. Of course, that would be the time my kiln errored out without reaching temperature. Twice. It's been taking longer on bisque firings lately, and using more power. Looks like it's time to replace the elements, but that's no help for me now.

One bit of good news, though--our order of Zircopax had finally come in, so I mixed up a 10,000-gram batch of glaze using the--hopefully--pure batch of calcined clay. I also dipped two more test bowls and fired them to cone 6 in the little test kiln at Club Mud, one with the new glaze, one the old. Glazed up my dinner plates, and a couple of special order pie plates. Washed off enough glazed pieces to redo the special orders, so at least those were likely to turn out. Went home around midnight and crashed.

Friday morning brought good news. Even three cones under-fired, both tests were smooth and vitreous. The suspect glaze had a lot of fine speckles, probably from iron in the sandy particles, but in reduction-fired stoneware, iron spots a feature, not a bug.

So I glazed all my remaining pots, the re-glazed orders, the soup bowls, toddlers, about half of the stew mugs and a few cat foods. Finished right at 5:30 pm.

What was going on? I suspect we had a donation of raw materials from a closing studio, and someone put fire clay in the ball clay bin, either mislabeled or through carelessness. I'm hoping that 8% of one clay is enough like another that it will all work out.

Fingers crossed.





Weekend reading pt. 2

Sep. 8th, 2025 07:04 pm
troisoiseaux: (reading 10)
[personal profile] troisoiseaux
Finished Bibliophobia by Sarah Chihaya, a memoir about her relationship to books and the ways this has intertwined with her lifelong mental health struggles, leading up to a nervous breakdown triggered by an inability to write her dissertation and resulting in a period where she was literally unable to read anything, which she names "bibliophobia." Each chapter structured around a different piece of writing of some personal significance: the Anne of Green Gables books, Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye, A.S. Byatt's Possession, Anne Carson's poem "The Glass Essay", Ruth Ozeki's A Tale for the Time Being, Child Ballad 78 ("The Unquiet Grave"), Helen DeWitt's The Last Samurai. Most of Chihaya's "framework" books(/poems) were ones I haven't read (yet— I've put holds on The Bluest Eye and Possession, both of which I've long vaguely intended to get around to reading), which was an incidental aspect of this that I actually really liked— less, I don't know, distracting? than if she'd been writing about books I personally had a strong connection to...? Interesting to read a book about the things we seek from books - salvation or explanations or distraction or whatever - because the chance of a mental ouroboros (seeking xyz from a book about seeking xyz from books) is high to inevitable.
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