mific: (Sheppard guitar woods)
[personal profile] mific posting in [community profile] stargateficrec
Shows: SGA
Rec Category: AU - no Stargate
Characters: Rodney McKay/John Sheppard, Ronon Dex, Teyla Emmagan
Categories: M/M
Words: 10,517
Warnings: none apply
Author on DW: [personal profile] berty
Author's Website: Berty on AO3
Link: When You Piece It All Together, It's A Love Story on AO3
Why This Must Be Read: This is absolutely a comfort read for me, and one I hope to reread many times. It's got all the good stuff: a great meet-cute, John as a somewhat fame-averse rock star, Ronon as "Big Ron" his head of security, Teyla as an eco-warrior, and Rodney as his usual genius self, blissfully unaware of the existence of celebrities. A lovely story, go read (or re-read) it!

the first bit, to get you going... )

(no subject)

Sep. 16th, 2025 09:20 pm
skygiants: Cha Song Joo and Lee Su Hyun from Capital Scandal taking aim at each other (baby shot you down)
[personal profile] skygiants
I liked the Korean movie Phantom (2023) enough that I decided to hunt down the novel on which it's based, Mai Jia's The Message -- in large part out of curiosity about whether it's also lesbians.

The answer: ... sort of! The lesbians are not technically textual but there's a bit of Lesbian Speculation and then a big pointed narrative hole where lesbians could potentially be. It is, however, without a doubt, Women Being Really Weird About Each Other, to the point where I'm considering it as a Yuletide fandom (perhaps even moreso than the movie, where the women are also weird about each other but in a more triumphant cinematic way and less of an ambiguous, psychologically complex and melancholic way. you know.)

The plot: well, as in the movie, there's a spy, and there's the Japanese Occupation, and there's a Big Haunted House where we're keeping all the possible spies to play mind games with until somebody fesses up. Because the book is set in 1941 China, there are actually three factions at play -- the Japanese and collaborators, the Communists and the Nationalists -- and for the whole first part of the book, fascinatingly enough, we are almost entirely in the head of the Japanese officer who's running the operation and choreographing all the mind games in an attempt to ferret out the Communist agent in his codebreaking division. The result is sort of a weird and almost darkly funny anti-heroic anti-Poirot situation, in which Hihara is constantly engineering increasingly complicated locked-room scenarios designed to get the spy to confess like the culprit in a Thin Man movie, and is constantly thwarted by his suspects inconveniently refusing to stick to the script, even when presented with apparently incontrovertible evidence, placed under torture, lied to about the deaths of other members of the party, etc. etc.

The suspects include several variously annoying men, plus two women whom we and everyone else are clearly intended to find the most interesting people there: quiet and competent Li Ningyu, cryptography division head, mother of two, whom everyone knows is semi-separated from an abusive husband, and who somehow manages to keep calmly slithering her way out of every accusation Hihara tries to stick on her; and her opposite, loud bratty chic Gu Xiaomeng, whom Hihara would very much like to rule out as a suspect as quickly as possible because she's the daughter of a very wealthy collaborator, and who seems moderately obsessed with her boss Li Ningyu For Some Reason.

Both book and movie spend, like, sixty percent of their length on this big house espionage mind games scenario and then abruptly take a left turn, with the next forty percent being Something Completely Different. In the film this left turn involves DRAMATIC ROMANTIC ACTION HEROICS!!!! so I was quite surprised to find that the book's left turn involves spoilers )

Final Deadline Reminder

Sep. 17th, 2025 03:03 am
galerian_ash: (an unexpected friend)
[personal profile] galerian_ash posting in [community profile] bethefirst
The deadline is almost upon us, which means that there's now one day left to finish your fic(s)! Technically, that is, because I'll throw in the same "surprise" mini-extension as I always do, and keep the collection open for submissions until an hour before reveals (which will happen at 00.01 GMT on the 19th).

Good job to everyone who has already posted, and best of luck to those who are still writing!

Daily Check-in

Sep. 16th, 2025 05:59 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 Tuesday, September 16, to midnight on Wednesday, September 17. (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #33628 Daily Check-in
This poll is closed.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 22

How are you doing?

I am OK.
13 (59.1%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now.
9 (40.9%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single.
10 (45.5%)

One other person.
9 (40.9%)

More than one other person.
3 (13.6%)




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.
 
[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Nate Gartrell

OAKLAND — As Antioch’s lengthy police corruption scandal draws to a close, a federal judge has added another twist to the saga, dismissing a felony charge against a former Antioch officer who has long-maintained that this case and a successful steroids prosecution were retaliation for him attempting to expose police corruption.

On Tuesday morning, Senior U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White dismissed a deprivation of rights charge against Devon Wenger, who still faces a charge of conspiring with two Antioch-officers-turned-felons to deprive the civil rights of people they came across in their jobs. White held off ruling on a defense motion to throw out the conspiracy charge until after Wenger’s trial, meaning that even if a jury convicts Wenger, the judge may overrule it.

The decision is only the latest stunner in the federal government’s prosecution of Wenger, a former Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputy and military combat veteran in Pakistan, who was one of 14 ex-Antioch and Pittsburg officers rounded up and charged in August 2023. Wenger is the only remaining officer whose case remains unresolved. Along the way he has gone through several defense attorneys, publicly accused various government officials of corruption and claimed repeatedly to have been targeted for his status as a “whistleblower” of excessive force and sexual harassment at the Antioch Police Department.

“I broke the blue wall of silence and spoke out against law enforcement corruption and now those same people are targeting me and prosecuting me for doing the right thing,” Wenger wrote on May 23 in an email to President Donald Trump, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi and other government officials, which was also sent to this news organization. He later accused White, the judge who dismissed the charge, of “jury tampering, misconduct, and failure to address prosecutorial retaliation in my federal whistleblower case.”

But on Tuesday, White agreed with Wenger’s lawyers who argued the federal government failed to prove that Wenger committed a crime on Oct. 26, 2021, when he shot 31-year-old Dajon Smith with a less-lethal rubber round launcher. At the time, Smith was surrounded by police next to a suspected stolen car with raised hands, but arguing as officers yelled “put your hands on your head.”

Prosecutors and defense attorneys stipulated that Smith had stolen a vehicle from a dealership in East Contra Costa hours earlier.

The case boiled down to video of the incident and dueling theories by defense and prosecution experts on police use of force. One of the expert witnesses was originally hired by federal prosecutors, who changed their mind about calling him as a witness, then he ended up on Wenger’s witness list, according to court records, suggesting his professional opinion may not have comported with the prosecution’s theory.

The conspiracy charge is built on text messages exchanged between Wenger and ex-Antioch officers Morteza Amiri and Eric Rombough. Last March, a jury convicted Amiri of deprivation of rights and falsifying records for unleashing his dog, Purcy, on a man during a traffic stop in Antioch, but acquitted him of conspiracy and other deprivation charges. Rombough, who was described by Wenger’s former lawyer as the most violent of the three, took a plea deal and became a government witness with the hope of leniency.

Wenger was supposed to go on trial with Amiri, but just two days in, his lawyer, Nicole Lopes, insisted on a mistrial blaming her law firm and struggles with mental health. After she appeared on a podcast bragging about getting Wenger a mistrial when White had denied a motion to sever the co-defendants, White accused her of a “lack of candor” to the court and kicked her off of Wenger’s case. A new lawyer from Los Angeles, Michael Schwartz, has taken on Wenger’s defense.

Wenger was convicted in May of distributing steroids, based on text messages, the testimony of another former Antioch officer, Daniel Harris, who admitted to selling steroids to several law enforcement officials. In the email to Trump, Bondi, and others, Wenger accused White of ignoring “manipulation” by technicians working for a Contra Costa District Attorney investigator “to inject text messages not native to my phone.” Wenger still faces sentencing in that case, regardless of how the civil rights trial pans out.

Prosecutors and defense attorneys are scheduled to make their closing arguments on Wednesday, court records show. The jury instructions make it clear that they only have one charge to decide on now.

[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by George Avalos

SAN LEANDRO — The shutdown of 21st Amendment Brewery, a Bay Area craft beer leader, will erase dozens of jobs in the Bay Area, affecting workers in two cities in the region, according to an official state government filing.

The brewery intends to eliminate a total of 76 jobs in the Bay Area, the company stated in a WARN notice it filed with the state Employment Development Department.

21st Amendment Brewery production center at 2010 Williams Street in San Leandro, seen in 2022.(Google Maps)
Exterior of 21st Amendment Brewery production center at 2010 Williams Street in San Leandro, seen in 2022. (Google Maps)

“The closings will involve the cessation of all operations and termination of all employees” of 21st Amendment Brewery, Nico Freccia, a managing partner, wrote in the WARN letter to the EDD.

Founded in 2000, the brewery will cease operations in San Leandro and in San Francisco.

The closures will eliminate 58 jobs at the company’s production center at 2010 Williams St. in San Leandro and another 18 jobs at the 21st Amendment brewpub in San Francisco.

21st Amendment Brewery disclosed in recent days that it had decided to cease operations, close both facilities, and discharge all of its employees.

In an interview with this news organization earlier in September, brewery co-owners Freccia and Shaun O’Sullivan indicated that the drink business has yet to recover or return to the business levels it had enjoyed prior to the coronavirus outbreak.

The brewery company lost a financial partner recently, a departure that prodded the partners to embark on the complete shutdown of the business and the dismissal of all its workers.

Check In: Day 16

Sep. 16th, 2025 06:45 pm
glitteringstars: (reading)
[personal profile] glitteringstars posting in [community profile] writethisfanfic
Hello, hello, hello!

How did writing go today?

Do you have rituals related to writing? Do you like to make a cup of tea before writing? Reread the last couple hundred words of your WIP? Read a few pages of a book?

a 2-run bomb from brett baty

Sep. 16th, 2025 07:37 pm
musesfool: close up of the Chrysler Building (home)
[personal profile] musesfool
Last night at this time, I was on what ended up to be a 90 minute (or more - I left after 90 minutes) call with other shareholders in my building to discuss options for complying with local law 97, which is all about reducing carbon emissions. It was informative, though as usual, the people running these meetings are bad at it it, and 2 people basically monopolized all the Q&A time with very specific-to-them concerns instead of applicable-to-all-tenants stuff, but at least nobody accused the board of being racist for muting them, which is what happened the last time I joined a building-related zoom call. Still only about a quarter of the people who live here showed up, which I find inexplicable considering the financial considerations involved. While no final decision was made, it seems like there will be a recommendation to take one of the incremental measures while continuing to explore the more expensive (but not the ludicrously expensive most expensive) options. So we'll see how that goes. If it helps my apartment not to turn into a sauna going forward, I am interested!

*

Baby Miss L is still trying to finalize her Halloween costume, but as with last year, there may be multiple outfits as she has a very full social calendar. She has gotten better about school, too - apparently she waves hello to everyone as she enters, and I imagine they all appreciate her attention. *g* I have also started compiling a list of books to buy her for her birthday and Christmas, which I guess I'll start shopping for soon.

*

I complain about work fairly often, but today I learned that 1. they've confirmed that our insurance will cover covid jabs for everyone who uses it, and 2. they're giving us 2 extra paid holidays this year since both 12/26 and 1/2 fall on Fridays. So I know I have it pretty good despite...everything happening in the world to try to ruin public health and nonprofits.

*

I can't remember if I posted about the very addictive phone game I recently downloaded, but after several lelvels where the only way to advance was to spend money to get helpful items, I deleted it. I can't be spending that kind of money and I am definitely the kind of person who needs to defeat the puzzles, even though I can see they are specifically designed to not be beatable without those helpful items. It's one reason I don't gamble or play "real" video games - I tend to get feverishly obsessive about winning and neither sleep nor money matter to me in that state. *hands* At least I know this about myself? Idk, but it felt good to delete the game even though I am still craving it.

*

The Mets snapped their losing streak on Sunday and still control their destiny in terms of a wild card spot, but given how poorly they've played for so long, this series with San Diego feels like a playoff game already. We'll see if they can hold the early lead. ....and now Lindor goes deep! <333

*

第四年第二百五十一天

Sep. 17th, 2025 08:04 am
nnozomi: (Default)
[personal profile] nnozomi posting in [community profile] guardian_learning
部首
囗 part 4
国, country; 图, drawing; 圆, round pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=31

词汇
约, appointment/arrangement; 大约, about; 节约, to save pinyin )
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-3-word-list/

Guardian:
别说他的地址了,我连他是男是女是圆是扁我都不知道, what do you mean his address, I don't even know if he's male or female, round or flat
希望你还记得我们有约, I hope you still remember we made an arrangement.

Me:
对外国人而言,这个习惯比较奇怪。
你是不是跟她去了约会?
trobadora: (Guardian - SID team)
[personal profile] trobadora posting in [community profile] c_ent
A gifting fest for Guardian and related fandoms: guardian-wishlist.dreamwidth.org


[community profile] guardian_wishlist sign-ups are now closed! We have 21 wishlists covering a variety of Guardian canons and related fandoms and a wide range of media. Go forth and make gifts!!! :D :D :D

Wishlists are tagged for fandoms and media (previous years' tags are labelled with their respective years, so check the plain fandom and media tags at the bottom for this year's), and there's also a spreadsheet for your convenience.

Anyone can write or make gifts for any sign-up, right up to reveals on 6 October (Reunion Festival). All gifts must be hidden from public view until reveals. Post or link gifts in comments on the recipient's wishlist. (Comments are screened.) Gift comments can be anonymous or signed in. You don't need a Dreamwidth or AO3 account to gift.

Rules/FAQ/schedule | AO3 collection | Fandom and media tags | Spreadsheet | Promo text and graphics

[ SECRET POST #6829 ]

Sep. 16th, 2025 06:42 pm
case: (Default)
[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #6829 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.


More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 19 secrets from Secret Submission Post #975.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Nate Gartrell

OAKLAND — He started selling fentanyl on Bay Area streets as a boy.

By age 18, prosecutors say he was directing a multi-state ring that stockpiled the deadly powder by the kilogram, sold ounces of it at at a time, and had ongoing plans to obtain more from the Cartel Jalisco New Generation in Mexico. Now, because of all this, 19-year-old Eldin Miralda Cruz will spend the remainder of his teens and part of his 20s in federal prison.

Last month, U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar sentenced Miralda Cruz was to four years in federal prison for conspiracy to distribute fentanyl, a federal offense that likely would have resulted in a higher prison term if not for his young age, according to court records. Prosecutors describe Miralda Cruz as “a hard-working, independent, and entrepreneurial young drug dealer,” who made hundreds of “pertinent” calls during a DEA wiretap investigation, negotiating not just drug deals in Oakland but Portland, Oregon, agents reportedly overheard him bossing around men in their 20s.

But could all of this been motivated by a personal tragedy? That’s what Miralda Cruz’s defense team has argued. They say that after making the dangerous trip, alone, from Honduras to the Bay Area, enrolling at International High School in Oakland, and taking a job at a packaging plant in Hayward, Miralda Cruz got word that his grandma was sick with cancer. That changed everything, a defense sentencing memo says.

“With little income coming in, he learned that his grandmother in Honduras had been diagnosed with cancer and needed help to pay for her treatment. Only 16 years old and struggling to find money, he turned to selling drugs,” his attorneys wrote in court filings. “It was a terrible decision that Mr. Miralda Cruz regrets immensely—he knows now that there was no excuse for the choice he made.”

Miralda Cruz was charged as part of a large scale DEA investigation that branched into two cases. One charging him in the Bay Area, another charging a family member named Melvin “Tito” Miralda Cruz in Portland. A raid of Melvin Miralda Cruz’s Portland stash house yielded 7.4 pounds of fentanyl powder as well as “over $100,000 in cash, multiple containers of a fentanyl cutting agent (Mannitol), and fentanyl processing equipment,” prosecutors said in court filings.

The wiretap call allegedly demonstrated Eldin had directed Melvin “and others to conduct dozens, if not over a hundred, drug deals” Oregon. Eldin also sold drugs to an undercover DEA agent five times in 2023 and 2024, including one $1,200 deal for five ounces, authorities said in court filings.

“In these communications, Mr. (Eldin) Miralda Cruz and Tito also discussed that one of their fentanyl sources was the Cartel Jalisco New Generation (CJNG), which is a cartel that is a major distributor of fentanyl and other controlled substances from Mexico into the western United States,” prosecutors said in court filings, later stating that Eldin Miralda Cruz was “no pawn, but instead directed co-conspirators who were older than him.”

The case against Melvin Miralda Cruz and his co-defendant, Pablo Marin Aguilera, is still pending.

Prosecutors and defense attorneys both agreed on the four-year prison term, with U.S. Attorneys acknowledging he’d have faced 70 to 87 months behind bars if not for his young age. The four-year sentence, prosecutors argued, struck a balance between the need for deterrence and message to other drug dealers that “while their youth will be a consideration, it will not be tantamount to a get-of-jail free card that absolves them of responsibility for their actions.”

After prison, Eldin Miralda Cruz will be deported back to Honduras, his attorneys said in court filings, quoting his own desire to “do things the right way.”

“Mr. Miralda-Cruz has no intention of returning to the country and reoffending. Though his childhood was challenging, he enjoys a supportive relationship with his parents, with whom he will be reunited when he returns to Honduras,” the defense sentencing memo says. “He also has plans for employment upon his return: He will work on his family’s farm and sell produce at his grandfather’s fruit stand.”

[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Grace Hase

As President Donald Trump continues his crackdown on immigrants living in the country illegally — including pushing large-scale enforcements in Democratic-controlled cities like Los Angeles and Chicago — Santa Clara County leaders want the county to expand its role in fighting back.

The Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a referral on Tuesday from Supervisors Sylvia Arenas and Betty Duong to craft a plan on how the county can coordinate a regional response to immigration enforcement activities and maximize the $13 million already allocated by the county, the city of San Jose and other organizations to support immigrant communities.

Santa Clara County has the largest share of immigrant residents of California’s 58 counties — more than 40% of its residents were born outside of the United States. One in five of immigrant residents also are undocumented, according to county officials.

“(The Trump Administration) is creating a humanitarian crisis right here at home where children are afraid to go to school, parents are afraid to go to work and families are pushed into hiding,” Duong said. “It is our responsibility as public servants to ensure the safety of everyone in our community, no matter what their status, no matter who they are.”

Arenas and Duong expect the work to be “cost-neutral” — leveraging the $11 million the county has allocated since Trump was elected to a second term in November — while potentially temporarily shifting staff to work on the plan.

“What this is actually doing is offering the Board an opportunity to shape the details of the work plan so that you can see what the objectives are, what the goals, what the activities are that are going to make this work effective and efficient,” Arenas said. “The money is already there. We have already approved it.”

While details of the plan are pending, Arenas and Duong requested that the Sheriff’s Office work with local law enforcement agencies to ensure everyone is complying with “sanctuary” jurisdiction policies that prevent using local resources to aid in federal immigration enforcement.

Santa Clara County allocates $6 million annually through its Office of Immigrant Relations to support immigration legal services. But in December 2024, supervisors upped that investment, shifting $5 million out of a reserve fund for actions like legal support to prevent family separation, rapid response efforts and “know your rights” education.

The county is the main funder of the local Rapid Response Network. In June, as federal authorities started carrying out arrests at immigration courts in San Francisco and Concord, the network’s hotline saw a surge of calls reporting possible Immigration and Customs Enforcement sightings.

The proposed plan received praise from advocates during Tuesday’s board meeting.

Dilza Gonzalez, the director of organizing for Sacred Heart Community Service, urged the board to “protect urgent community needs.”

“Right now the premise of protection against unreasonable searches and equal protection clause under the 4th and 14th amendments have been stripped away from people who don’t look white or don’t speak perfect English regardless of your immigration or legal status,” she said. “Our communities are being unfairly targeted, and it is our shared responsibility to step up and defend their rights.”

But several residents criticized the county for trying to interfere with federal immigration activity.

One woman, who identified herself only as Alice, questioned why the county wasn’t advising individuals living here illegally to self-deport. As part of its broader immigration enforcement efforts, the Trump administration has tried to persuade undocumented individuals to self-deport by offering them a $1,000 stipend.

“Are you really trying to help illegals or are you trying to exploit them?” Alice told the Board of Supervisors. “It’s not compassionate but cruel to mislead them into thinking you have legal authority to defend them when in fact you don’t.”

While Trump has sent the National Guard into other Democratic-controlled locales like Los Angeles and Washington D.C. as part of his crackdown on both immigrants living in the country illegally and crime, and made threats to other blue cities like Oakland, Santa Clara County has so far managed to stay out of the president’s crosshairs.

Last month, the Justice Department published a list of cities, counties and states that it identified as “sanctuary” jurisdictions. While Santa Clara County has had the aforementioned policy on the books since 2011, San Diego County, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Berkeley were the only California locales to make the list.

“Sanctuary policies impede law enforcement and put American citizens at risk by design,” Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a recent news release. “The Department of Justice will continue bringing litigation against sanctuary jurisdictions and work closely with the Department of Homeland Security to eradicate these harmful policies around the country.”

With other cities in the spotlight of the Trump administration, Supervisor Margaret Abe-Koga asked that the county ensures they “are not taking any strategies that jeopardize our immigrant residents through drawing federal scrutiny.”

“That’s my concern,” she said. “I don’t want a bigger bullseye on our back rather than protecting our community.”

Overlooked Again

Sep. 16th, 2025 05:06 pm
yourlibrarian: Stephen amuses Jon Stewart (OTH-StewartIsAmused-random_beauty88)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian
1) Some interesting posts at Henry Jenkins blog about the Peabody Awards process and disruption in the entertainment industry. "So, Peabody meets 3 times face-to-face. And it is an award that is decided across genres and platforms: television, radio, podcasting, and interactive, which is games and VR, etc. And across genre: entertainment, news, documentary, etc. But in particular, it's decided by a unanimous vote of a board of 18...who represent lots of different facets. There's critics, which include academics and TV critics, media executives, writers, and showrunners. ..which is different from a campaign for 26,000 voting members, in which you have no control of what they've watched and what they've not watched...Aziz Ansari was famous for coming to our show and saying, “You know, this is pretty cool. It's like you watch all of our shit, and you just decided it was good, and we didn't have to go to a bunch of weird-ass parties and stuff"

Two other factors: "It's not just celebrating entertainment. It's trying to talk about the ways that popular culture and entertainment can deeply shape who we are and want to be as a people, as empathetic citizens in the world" and "also...is it a story that matters? So, sometimes the craft can be brilliant, but it may not be a story that matters." Read more... )

2) A few more notes about Silent Witness as I move into S26. S23 seemed a really unusual season, enough so that I wondered about its production dates. Read more... )

3) Watched a documentary on the BeeGees which, like a lot of documentaries, goes very light on the time after their popularity peaked. (That was one thing the Billy Joel and Bon Jovi ones avoided). Read more... )

4) A Spy Among Friends was well written and interesting to watch but I kept constantly thinking about the 2003 Cambridge Spies which I saw last year and suspect it's much closer to the truth. Read more... )

5) Just a few comments about the Emmys, mostly in how unsurprising it was that Stephen Colbert finally won an Emmy for Best Show more because voters were jolted into a show of support. Yet John Oliver won yet again, twice. (Particular irony given the broadcast was on CBS).

Otherwise can't say it was entertaining and I wish a lot of stuff not involved in handing out awards had been cut. The tribute to Gilmore Girls seemed to really exemplify "too little, too late" since it and so many shows from the WB had been overlooked through sheer snobbery decades ago, when the attention would have done more good.

Poll #33627 Kudos Footer-540
This poll is anonymous.
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 5

Want to leave a Kudos?

View Answers

Kudos!
5 (100.0%)



[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Paul Rogers

For the past 40 years, thousands of people have fanned out across beaches, lakes, streams and parks every September for California’s Coastal Cleanup Day — the state’s largest annual volunteer event.

They have picked up litter to help improve the environment, protect wildlife and spend a few hours outdoors with family and friends. But this Saturday, on the event’s 41st year, there will be a new incentive: Prizes. Good ones, actually.

In an effort to increase participation, which dropped during the COVID pandemic and has yet to fully recover, the California Coastal Commission will offer some impressive prizes hidden in small 4-inch wooden chests at cleanup sites around the state. More than 20 vouchers can be exchanged for such rewards as $1,000 in cash, two nights at the Sonoma Mission Inn and Fairmont San Francisco luxury hotels, an e-bike, San Francisco Giants tickets, an inflatable kayak, $100 gift cards, and the opportunity to throw out the first pitch at an A’s game.

“We are turning it into the world’s largest scavenger hunt,” said Eben Schwartz, marine debris program manager at the California Coastal Commission, which oversees the event. “There’s a lot of excitement about it.”

The prizes were donated by various large corporations, including Wells Fargo, Fairmont, the San Francisco Giants, the A’s, Oracle, Door Dash, Aquarium of the Pacific and others.

The event runs from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday. To sign up, go to coastalcleanupday.org

The cleanup isn’t just limited beaches along the ocean. Volunteers for years have cleaned up creeks, rivers, lakes, and other inland areas. For the first time, all 58 of California’s counties will participate, after groups in Trinity County (population 15,000) organized a cleanup this year along the Trinity River near Weaverville, about 70 miles south of the Oregon border.

Since 1985 when the statewide event began, it has been a rite of fall. More than 1.8 million volunteers have picked up more than 27 million pounds of debris across California. This year there are more than 700 cleanup sites.

Major agencies, like the East Bay Regional Park District and the Santa Clara Valley Water District are cleaning up multiple sites.

Volunteers are asked to bring gloves and a bucket to the site they choose. If they aren’t able to bring either, the site coordinator, often part of a parks department or non-profit group, provides them. Everyone tallies up what is picked up. After 40 years the data has shown numerous trends.

In general, California’s beaches and waterways have gotten cleaner over the past 40 years.

Twenty years ago, in 2004, volunteers picked up an average of 18 pounds of litter per person. Last year it was 8.5 pounds. Some of that is due to monthly cleanups that non-profit groups do on their own throughout the year.

But recent changes in California laws also have affected the type of litter found on beaches, Schwartz said.

A top-ten list of the most commonly picked up litter items on Coastal Cleanup Day, an annual volunteer effort to remove trash from California beaches.In 2019, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law banning smoking on state beaches and state parks, with a fine of up to $25 per violation. Cigarette butts, nearly always the top item found each year by number, declined to 22% of the total amount of trash picked up last year — 82,895 butts — down from 394,920 in 2009, when they made up 37% of all trash collected.

Plastic bags have shown a similar drop since former Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law in 2014 banning single-use plastic grocery bags in an attempt to reduce litter and ocean pollution. Voters upheld the law two years later, rejecting a challenge from the plastic bag industry.

The result? In 2009, plastic grocery bags made up 8.7% of the pieces of litter found in California during Coastal Cleanup Day. Last year, they totaled just 1.6%.

“If anyone ever tells you plastic bag bans don’t work this proves them wrong,” Schwartz said. “It’s a huge success story. There has been a steady drop.”

The event is still bouncing back from the COVID pandemic. In 2019, the year before COVID hit, 74,410 people volunteered. During COVID in 2020, only 19,730 people did, without organized group events. That number grew to 47,493 by last year.

Schwartz said he expects 50,000 or more will join this Saturday.

Funny items turn up every year.

“Last year, we found an old ThighMaster at Point Isabel in Richmond,” said Jessica Sloan, volunteer program supervisor, with the East Bay Regional Park District. “It was half-hidden in the mud, with a few barnacles on it. But it still worked. People were trying it out.”

Sloan said East Bay Parks, which will have 11 cleanup locations this year, typically receives about 2,000 volunteers. Last year they hauled away 8,000 pounds of trash and cleaned 12 miles of shoreline in three hours.

“It’s fun,” she said. “It’s an incredible way to give back. Every piece of trash that we pick up is cleaning habitat for wildlife and making the parks better for our community.”

On the Peninsula, a non-profit group, the Pacific Beach Coalition, will oversee cleanups at 15 locations from Daly City to Half Moon Bay, and including Foster City.

The organization purchased $10 gift cards from coffee shops and other local businesses to hide as prizes. Lynn Adams, president of the coalition, said it’s important to remove trash before the first big rains of winter wash it into the ocean. Prizes help make the morning fun, she added.

“The beach cleanups are kind of like a wild hunt anyway,” said Adams, a former school teacher. “This makes it more of a game. It’s fun to go out with your family, and to know you are not the only ones who care. A lot of people care. It feels good to do something positive and to be with other people who are doing something positive.”

Robert Redford

Sep. 16th, 2025 02:31 pm
elayna: (Steve Rogers)
[personal profile] elayna
I admit, when I'm watching a movie I really enjoy, I'm usually absorbing without thinking ahead. So I was totally flabbergasted when the Winter Soldier showed up at Pierce's house and was taking orders from him. In retrospect, it seems obvious that they wouldn't have hired someone of Robert Redford's caliber to just be an upright lead bureaucrat type, he must be there for a significant twist. But that was a great 'omg!' moment for me.

Redford was one of the greats, and one of the most significant actors of my childhood. Looking at dates, I think Jeremiah Johnson was probably the first movie of his I saw, though all I remember is he looked fabulous as a mountain man. Then The Way We Were and The Sting... and somewhere in there I saw Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid on TV, being devastated by that ending. Three Days of the Condo and The Electric Horseman...I only saw All the President's Men within the last 10 years or so. That was weirdly fascinating just for how much the technology of journalism has changed.

I don't know much about his personal life, but he had an amazing career and did so many worthwhile things and lived to a pretty darned good age... we were lucky to have him and the body of work he created. RIP, Robert Redford, you will be missed.

Drive-By Update

Sep. 16th, 2025 05:32 pm
lunabee34: (Default)
[personal profile] lunabee34
I contacted my rheumatologist because I've been having increased pain--hurting enough to wake me at night and keep me awake, hurting enough to make walking difficult--and have gotten a referral to PT to learn how to use a cane. Fiona's gonna help me bling her out once I get her. The doc also went ahead and started the process of getting me a biologic; it's so fucking involved, y'all.

You can't get a biologic at a regular pharmacy; only specialty pharmacies carry them. So right now I'm at the stage where the RX has been sent to the specialty pharmacy and they're in the process of doing the prior authorization and figuring out how much my insurance will pay. I'm just waiting for them to get back to me to let me know if it's been approved and what the copay will be.

Assuming it gets approved and is affordable, I'll be taking once weekly injections of Enbrel.

Anybody here take Enbrel and want to share?
[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Kate Talerico

California lawmakers last week passed a bill to allow taller housing developments near major transit hubs, which they hope will create much needed housing and boost transit ridership. But to get the bill over the finish line, it will also include a number of exemptions, including one loophole that allows an entire Bay Area county to avoid the law.

The bill, SB 79, is the culmination of an eight-year effort by Democratic Sen. Scott Wiener of San Francisco to pass a “transit-oriented development” bill. The new law gives developers permission to build multifamily housing as high as seven stories within a quarter-mile radius of BART or Caltrain, or up to six stories within a half-mile radius. Land along light-rail and certain bus lines will also be up-zoned to allow for buildings up to six and five stories high.

Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to sign the measure in the coming weeks.

“Decades of overly restrictive policies have driven housing costs to astronomical levels, forcing millions of people away from jobs and transit and into long commutes from the suburbs.” Wiener said in a statement. “Building more homes in our most sustainable locations is the key to tackling the affordability crisis and locking in California’s success for many years to come.”

But the final version is narrower than Wiener’s original 2018 proposal, having been whittled down to meet the demands of suburban lawmakers and affordability activists who have blocked previous versions of the bill.

One amendment to the bill meant that it would only apply to counties with more than 15 high-frequency train or bus stops. Ultimately, just seven counties within the state fit the bill: Alameda, San Francisco, Santa Clara, San Mateo, Sacramento, Los Angeles and San Diego counties. (Orange County will be included after their streetcar project is completed next year.)

In the last week of the session, legislators tweaked the language defining which stations count toward that threshold. The changes allowed one Bay Area county in particular to duck the law: Contra Costa.

With its 12 BART stations, and three Amtrak stations on the Capital Corridor line in Richmond, Martinez and Antioch, Contra Costa has exactly 15 qualifying stations, just below the threshold.

The Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors and city councilmembers in Lafayette and Orinda — both home to BART stations that would have been subject to up-zoning to allow higher density — lobbied their state lawmakers to get the amendment passed. They argued that SB 79 would increase density along fire evacuation zones in the county and put existing residents at risk.

Assemblymember Anamarie Avila Farias, who represents northern Contra Costa County, said in a statement that the final bill language “upheld [Wiener’s] vision while also respecting the distinct needs of each community.”

Tenant advocates also got carve-outs, which they say will help prevent displacement of low-income families. Developers can’t use SB 79 to advance a project that would demolish more than two rent-controlled apartments, which would prevent most multifamily buildings built before 2014 from being redeveloped through the law.

Through 2031, cities may also exempt certain areas defined as “low-resource” by the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee, so long as they also plan for density in other parts of the city. That could exempt much of the areas around BART stations in Oakland, San Leandro and Hayward from SB 79, if those cities act.

Local government officials, who long have been worried about losing local control over zoning decisions, will retain some authority under the amended bill, too. To get out of SB 79, cities can draft alternative zoning plans within transit areas by 2026, but must preserve at least half the mandated density stipulated by the law.

Developers who do use SB 79 will have to meet certain affordability standards as well. Projects with 10 or more units must set aside between 7% and 13% of them for low-income households. Projects on land owned by transit agencies face even stricter mandates of 25%. For projects over 85 feet high, they’ll have to use union labor, per an amendment negotiated in by the State Building and Construction Trades.

“The bill has undergone changes that limits where it applies,” said Jordan Grimes, a housing policy advocate with the Greenbelt Alliance, which sponsored the bill. “But this is still a monumental bill that will have significant impacts across California.”

California has made an effort to chip away at strict regulations around housing in recent years as it seeks to boost supply amid a housing shortage that has led to skyrocketing rent and housing costs. While lawmakers have passed a series of reforms in recent years, many have been diluted in negotiations as Democrats who control the legislature worked to satisfy competing constituencies.

Zoning has been among the most divisive issues. The split often runs not along party lines but geography, with urban legislators favoring state mandates to spur development and suburban representatives fighting to preserve local control.

That divide was evident in the final vote on SB 79. The measure passed 43-19 in the Assembly and 21-8 in the Senate. Several Bay Area Democrats withheld support, including Assembly members Diane Papan of San Mateo, Liz Ortega of Hayward and Josh Becker of Menlo Park. Assembly member Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, whose Contra Costa County district was carved out of the bill, also did not vote. Republicans in the Legislature were split, with a handful voting for the bill.

Housing advocates say that such amendments were necessary to get the votes for the bill.

“The fact that we could pass this bill at all is just a massive step forward for the state,” said Jeremy Levine, executive director of the pro-housing group Palo Alto Forward and a member of Inclusive Lafayette. “It will provide a blueprint for what works, and hopefully we’ll be able to build on that foundation in future legislative sessions.”

trobadora: (Guardian - SID team)
[personal profile] trobadora posting in [community profile] sid_guardian
A gifting fest for Guardian and related fandoms: guardian-wishlist.dreamwidth.org


[community profile] guardian_wishlist sign-ups are now closed! We have 21 wishlists covering a variety of Guardian canons and related fandoms and a wide range of media. Go forth and make gifts!!! :D :D :D

Wishlists are tagged for fandoms and media (previous years' tags are labelled with their respective years, so check the plain fandom and media tags at the bottom for this year's), and there's also a spreadsheet for your convenience.

Anyone can write or make gifts for any sign-up, right up to reveals on 6 October (Reunion Festival). All gifts must be hidden from public view until reveals. Post or link gifts in comments on the recipient's wishlist. (Comments are screened.) Gift comments can be anonymous or signed in. You don't need a Dreamwidth or AO3 account to gift.

Rules/FAQ/schedule | AO3 collection | Fandom and media tags | Spreadsheet | Promo text and graphics
trobadora: (Guardian - SID team)
[personal profile] trobadora posting in [community profile] guardian_wishlist
A gifting fest for Guardian and related fandoms: guardian-wishlist.dreamwidth.org


[community profile] guardian_wishlist sign-ups are now closed! We have 21 wishlists covering a variety of Guardian canons and related fandoms and a wide range of media. Go forth and make gifts!!! :D :D :D

Wishlists are tagged for fandoms and media (previous years' tags are labelled with their respective years, so check the plain fandom and media tags at the bottom for this year's), and there's also a spreadsheet for your convenience.

Anyone can write or make gifts for any sign-up, right up to reveals on 6 October (Reunion Festival). All gifts must be hidden from public view until reveals. Post or link gifts in comments on the recipient's wishlist. (Comments are screened.) Gift comments can be anonymous or signed in. You don't need a Dreamwidth or AO3 account to gift.

Rules/FAQ/schedule | AO3 collection | Fandom and media tags | Spreadsheet | Promo text and graphics
duskpeterson: The lowercased letters D and P, joined together (Default)
[personal profile] duskpeterson

OTHER PUBLIC PORTIONS OF THE ROYAL PALACE

The High Court

The rest of the Koretian palace is more easily accessed than the royal residence, rewarding visitors with many hours' worth of sights. I can only touch here upon a few of the more popular places to visit.

A visit to Koretia's High Court is the goal of most visitors. Here Koretia's ruler holds important court cases. In the moment of judgment, he transforms into his godly form. Thus the High Court doubles as a place of worship for most Koretians.

A tip: Although the Jackal considerately wears a mask to hide the most terrifying features of his transformation (which the mask itself barely hints at), it is still wise not to look directly upon the Jackal at his moment of judgment. A few sidelong glances are reasonable enough; the Jackal does not – as one rumor insists – strike down anyone who sees him in divine form. But looking for too long at the Jackal in judgment can have unfortunate effects on viewers. For this reason, a healing woman remains in attendance to assist any visitors who may pass out.

In olden times, court cases were heard privately by Koretia's Kings. The current court, like all of the palace except for the royal residence, was built by Emor during its occupation of Koretia from 961 to 976. During that period, the palace served as the home for the dominion governor, and the court was used by him for trials. A memorial to the Koretians who are thought to have been innocent when they were executed or tortured to death upon the governor's orders has been placed near the entrance of the court. The memorial was paid for by the Chara, at the time that he freed Koretia. It is believed that the Chara had his late father were unaware during that time period of the crimes being committed by the governor in the name of the Chara.


[Translator's note: The Chara's discovery of his governor's offenses is described in Blood Vow and Law of Vengeance.]

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