Mental images to soundscapes that seem to relate to everything and nothing in particular. Calming those inner voices. (No idea what that is but somehow it resonates.)
youstillfeelthem.bandcamp.com/…
#vaporwave #bandcamp #you still feel them out here don't_you #ambient
#you still feel them out here don
China's Green Triumph (Sam Sifton/New York Times)
nytimes.com/2025/11/12/briefin…
memeorandum.com/251112/p150#a2…
China's Green Triumph
By Sam Sifton / New York Times. View the full context on memeorandum.memeorandum
“If Darwin had seen in life what Dostoevsky saw, he would not have talked of the law of the preservation of species, but of its destruction.”
— Lev Shestov, In Job’s Balances: On the Sources of the Eternal Truths
via metamorphesque
Bulls rookie Noa Essengue dealing with growing pains of being a project
https://chicago.suntimes.com/bulls/2025/11/12/bulls-rookie-noa-essengue-growing-pains-being-project?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Chicago Sports @chicago-sports-ChicagoSunTimes
Bulls rookie Noa Essengue dealing with growing pains of being a project
Essengue finished with an impressive 28 points for the Windy City Bulls on Tuesday, but that hasn't changed the plans the big-team Bulls have for the 12th overall pick.Joe Cowley (Chicago Sun-Times)
U.S. had intel on Israeli forces using human shields in Gaza, sources say
The U.S. intelligence gathered in the final months of 2024 raised questions inside the White House and the intelligence community about how widely the tactic was being used.Erin Banco (The Japan Times)
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/sonder-bankruptcy-9.6976737?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Una imagen de un rostro humanoide. El rostro es rosa y está formado por un patrón de puntos, con una textura granulada. El rostro tiene ojos, una nariz y una boca sonriente. El rostro está rodeado por líneas curvas oscuras sobre un fondo azul oscuro. El rostro parece estar abrazándose.
Proporcionado por @altbot, generado de forma privada y local usando Gemma3:27b
🌱 Energía utilizada: 0.064 Wh
https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/matthew-mcconaughey-michael-caine-ai-9.6976757?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
📷 glimmertoppen.no/blefjell.html
🗺️ openstreetmap.org/?mlat=59.799… #sky #skies #view #webcam
OpenStreetMap
OpenStreetMap is a map of the world, created by people like you and free to use under an open license.OpenStreetMap
India faces a stern test in two-match home series against South Africa
https://apnews.com/article/cricket-india-south-africa-test-dc35cec0fb61da408da283bbb5e69e89?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Asia @asia-AssociatedPress
[OC] I found about 47,000 US Streets that include names of US States (eg, “Texas St”). There are ~94 streets that include “North Dakota”, but none of them are in North Dakota. Other states frequently use their own name.
I found about 47,000 US Streets that include names of US States (eg, "Texas St"). There are ~94 streets that include "North Dakota", but none of them are inBYTESEU (Bytes Europe)
Economics Explained did a video explaining the 2025 Nobel Prize in Economics.
In summary, technological progress happens when people who know stuff work together with people who do stuff; scientists working with engineers, for example.
This is particularly relevant today, because AI's main value proposition is it lets you do stuff without knowing stuff, a situation that doesn't result in innovation, and can even work against it.
Anyway, it's a good video, and a solid channel in general:
youtube.com/watch?v=u4hZAMp25s…
- YouTube
Auf YouTube findest du die angesagtesten Videos und Tracks. Außerdem kannst du eigene Inhalte hochladen und mit Freunden oder gleich der ganzen Welt teilen.youtube.com
Octoberfest 2025
Octoberfest 2025 The 2025 Category Theory Octoberfest was held on the weekend of October 25th through October 26th. Below you’ll find slides and videos. Abstracts in pdf format are here. J.S.…richardblute.ca
Doctor Deathray
in reply to Andrew (Television Executive) • • •there was a touring production of Sweeney Todd where all the actors were also the musicians. When they weren’t on stage, they would pick up a cello, accordion, or get behind a piano.
It’s one of my favorite pieces I’ve seen.
Honorable mentions to an adaptation of Night of the Living Dead, Faust, and The Metamorphosis
Andrew (Television Executive)
in reply to Andrew (Television Executive) • • •I really adore the importance of being earnest.
I also have a soft spot for twelfth night, because I once played Sebastian in a slightly better than you might expect for high schoolers adaptation.
But aside from a handful of other Shakespeare works, a couple of musicals, and the plays I've worked crew on, I have very little experience with live theater and I increasingly regret it.
Andrew (Television Executive)
in reply to Andrew (Television Executive) • • •I've been thinking more about Theater.
It's shocking to me that live theater isn't more of a part of people's lives.
Our town has a great theater (building/stage) but the local community theater (organization) does so little with it.
Andrew (Television Executive)
in reply to Andrew (Television Executive) • • •Every town I've lived in, in fact, as had essentially this.
I've seen three or four performances in "local theaters" by local theater orgs over the last 25 years, and they've been fine, sometimes good sometimes bad, but *shockingly* infrequent.
Andrew (Television Executive)
in reply to Andrew (Television Executive) • • •Part of this is on me, I have missed a couple of opportunities to see things here in town but ...
They host four performances per show, usually. They do between two and four shows per year.
Most of the rest of the time, the building is just empty.
Andrew (Television Executive)
in reply to Andrew (Television Executive) • • •And it's an all volunteer cast and a mostly volunteer crew and we're a small town. I understand why they don't do more performances per show.
I mostly understand why their existing crew doesn't do more shows, even.
But it still feels like a real missed opportunity to not have an occasional tour come through.
Doctor Deathray
in reply to Andrew (Television Executive) • • •tours are expensive, and it’s hard to pay when people aren’t showing up. I know a lot of the economics of community theatre. I ran the largest one in North Alabama for a bit.
Rights are also per-show, so most of the time, unless it’s a crazy popular (also usually expensive) musical, it doesn’t make sense to do. We spent around $5000 on my production of Arsenic and Old Lace. We spent close to $20k on The Little Mermaid.
Touring musicians are cheaper to get in than touring theatre productions, unless you’re talking traveling Children’s theatre like NC Shakes used to do before they died off.
That stage also is not great for what most touring productions would need, aside from some black box style productions.
I miss theatre. I want to get involved again. Time is a finite resource
Andrew (Television Executive)
in reply to Doctor Deathray • • •@DoctorDeathray
The fact that rights are so expensive is frankly ridiculous, and the fact that local theaters think it's a good idea to pay for those rights is frustrating.
Getting people to show up is definitely a problem. We've had a hard enough time getting people to come out for consistently excellent music, and that tends to pack a house faster than a stage show no one has ever heard of.
I understand *why* there aren't more performances here or in other towns. I get it.
But it's still a tragedy, and one that I think is largely self perpetuating.
Doctor Deathray
in reply to Andrew (Television Executive) • • •I should clarify, those were overall budgets including rights. Anything musical related is way more expensive as you’re paying for music rights and performance rights.
But yeah.
This is why companies like Alabama Shakespeare, NC Shakes (RIP), and the group who I can’t recall that runs the Black Friar in Virginia are running lower budget shows (for professional theatre, they pay everyone).
Rights get crazy, and public domain opens up so much. It can just be hard to get people out unless they feel it’s approachable.
It’s something you’ve got me thinking about more. How to do community theatre a bit better, more approachable while keeping costs down. It’s tough.