Why it’s easy to be misunderstood when talking about probability
2026-Jan-12, Monday 11:00Fanfiction: Broken Hearts and Broken Bones (The Goes Wrong Show, Robert/Chris)
2026-Jan-12, Monday 12:50There's something very nostalgic about how loud and ridiculous Robert is; writing him brings me back to writing Jeremy Clarkson, back in my Top Gear days. They're both a lot of fun to write!
Thank you to
Title: Broken Hearts and Broken Bones
Fandom: The Goes Wrong Show
Rating: PG-13
Pairing: Robert/Chris
Wordcount: 2,300
Summary: Robert attempts to seduce Chris. His techniques leave a little to be desired.
( Broken Hearts and Broken Bones )
January Meme: Favourite Show to watch in 2025
2026-Jan-12, Monday 13:48For the third time, this show managed to present a new ensemble of characters per season (plus the few recurring ones) and made me care about them. Now I remember several shows that were originally intended to be "anthology" shows - the one that immediately comes to mind is Heroes - i.e. where the idea was to present a new cast of characters every season - and which when the first season was a success changed their mind because the audience had fallen in love with these characters. Unfortunately, this also meant that the subsequent seasons showed there had been no plan, not even a vague character arc kind of plan, for those characters, and the show quality rapidly diminished, making me wish they'd stuck to the anthology concept. Now Foundation, to me, found a happy medium between the "anthology" concept which its intended huge time spam demands and the fact that most viewers do want some characters to remain attached to, or at least interested in, who are around for more than one season. And they manage it twofold: courtesy of in-universe plot devices, there are in fact some characters around through all three seasons so far - Gail Dornick, Demerzel and sort, kinda, Hari Seldon ( in a spoilery fashion ). And there are three more actors araound through all three seasons playing different characters who are at the same time variations of the same character, i.e. the Cleonic Dynasty exponents, clones in different stages of aging. (It's not unimportant that they play clones because the stories and developments each Cleon takes in each season are richer and more interesting if you have other Cleons to compare them to.)
But, and this is an important but: the show also offers characters who are around only in one season/era the show takes place. (Or two at most, sob.) And manages to make them interesting and different from each other. Here I would argue the show grew from season 1 - where there were some interesting, memorable characters around, like the Luminarian priestess, but also some which for me didn't work in the way they were intended (the Huntress) - to season 2, where basically every single new character was interesting - Constant, Hober Mallow, Space!Belisarius etc.. In fact, I was so attached to the s2 newbies that I kept wondering whether the show would manage to do it again after the next time jump, and the first s3 episode or two left me a bit sceptical on that count - but then I changed my mind. Granted, I still am lukewarm about Pritcher, but Toran and Bayta were great (not just due to the spoilery thing at the end of the season, though it makes the rewatch of s3 I just finished even more rewarding), I loved Ambassador Quent, and the First Speaker as well.
Another reason: s3 offered the pay off to several long term mysteries and developments - from who was responsible for the destruction of the Star Bridge (and why) to why ( a spoilery for s2 thing happened ) - , wrapped up one of THE major storylines of the show ( which is spoilery for s3 ), and did it in a way that was both unepected yet made perfect character sense, and set up enough new questions and storylines which make glad there is a season 4 already secured: ( For example, Spoilery Questions asked )
And then there's the superb long term character development.
And there's the way the show asks questions the books couldn't, lacking the concept of the Cleonic Dynasty. ( Demerzel and the Cleons: A Tale in Three Seasons )
Lastly: I loved s3 for the way it gave us new combinations of long term characters. ( Which are spoilery. ) And for being such an acting showcase for both recurring actors - Terence Mann certainly owned those last three episodes when he was on screen - and new to the show ones: Synnøve Karlsen as Bayta first and foremost, with again rewatching letting me additionally admire what she does there. (Though this time around I knew she was the same actress who had played Clarice Orsini in I Medici and young Cassandra Austen in Miss Austen, I forgot all about it again when watching her on screen. "We're good at making people love us, you and I", as she says to Magnifico. Indeed.
The other days
Korean practice
2026-Jan-12, Monday 13:38You can write about whatever you want. If you're uninspired, tell us the story of what you're currently watching/reading/playing...
You can talk to one another.
You can also correct one another. Or just indicate "No corrections, please" in your comment if you prefer.
화이팅! <3
Interesting Links for 12-01-2026
2026-Jan-12, Monday 12:00- 1. Brands say Amazon's 'Buy for Me' is listing their products without permission
- (tags:Amazon shopping )
- 2. 1970 Paris, cut into a grid and photographed
- (tags:Paris photos history )
- 3. J.R.R. Tolkien, Using a Tape Recorder for the First Time, Reads from The Hobbit for 30 Minutes (1952)
- (tags:Tolkien reading TheHobbit audio )
Snowflake Challenge #6: Top 10 Challenge
2026-Jan-13, Tuesday 19:28Vincent Benítez/Goffredo Tedesco dancing by
Young!Thomas Lawrence & Raymond O'Malley with matching keychains by
Conclavification of diptych by Albrecht Durer by
the bright Morning Star by
pumpkin head Vincent Benítez/Lawrence dancing by
Cornus Kousa by dambobodam7 : Vincent Benítez surrounded by lilies
Thomas Lawrence starring in a heartburn ad by
Let’s have a conclave by
Vincent Benítez catching a plushie by
Making autism into a partisan issue can only be harmful
2026-Jan-07, Wednesday 18:00Snowflake Challenge #6 : top 10
2026-Jan-12, Monday 11:35
Challenge #6: Top 10 challenge. The top 10 of anything you like.
These are the top 10 games I’ve played recently (well, within the past year).
1. Gabriel Knight: Sins of the Fathers, the 20th Anniversary Edition by Phoenix Online Studios, originally by Sierra On-Line.
A timeless classic point-and-click adventure. Join a murder investigation and delve into Voodoo mysteries in New Orleans. I had played this game before (and the original one too), but felt compelled to replay it recently, after discovering the iPad version. It’s still the best!
2. OneShot by Future Cat.
A puzzle-adventure game made in RPG Maker. You’re on a mission to save a dying world by recovering its sun. The game is not only cute and touching but also a technical marvel. It’s heavily meta, breaks traditional game mechanics, and does things with your computer that I never thought were possible from within a game!
3. Creaks by Amanita Design.
A 2D puzzle-platformer set in a surreal world with gorgeous hand-drawn graphics. Find your way through a maze-like mansion inhabited by birds, ghosts and robots. The puzzles are very clever, evolve in complexity, and require thinking outside the box. It's very fulfilling to find new ways to use existing objects.
4. Nine Noir Lives by Silvernode Studios.
A classic-style point-and-click adventure reminiscent of Monkey Island in both atmosphere and puzzles (but easier). As PI Cuddles, investigate a murder in Meow Meow Furrington, a city of anthropomorphic cats. It's also emotionally stirring, touching on themes like grief and loss and drugs.
5. White Shadows by Monokel.
A 2.5D puzzle-platformer set in a dark, dystopian city of birds, pigs, and other animals. It’s reminiscent of Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm. The puzzles are easy, but the game plays like a movie. The graphics are greyscale, which fits the atmosphere perfectly, and the lighting and sound effects are amazing.
6. The Past Within by Rusty Lake.
A puzzle game in the usual Rusty Lake style, dealing with dark and creepy mysteries. Unlike the other games, this one is co-op: one player is in the past and the other in the future, and you have to find ways to communicate between them. For the lack of gamer friends, I cheated and played both parts alone on two computers. It works fine ;)
7. Randal’s Monday by Nexus Game Studios.
Another classic-style point-and-click adventure, with a lot of pop-culture references and cynical humour. Randal is stuck in a time loop, trying to fix his mess-ups but only making things worse. (Note: Randal is a jerk. He’s rude and obnoxious, but the game was still absolutely fun to play!)
8. A Pet Shop After Dark by npckc.
A puzzle game made in Ren’Py. It looks deceptively simple and the graphics are minimalistic, but the gameplay is heavily meta. Much of it involves messing around with your actual filesystem ;) and some of the puzzles are truly devious. I love this stuff!
9. Three Minutes to Eight by Chaosmonger Studio.
A pixel-art point-and-click adventure. You’re stuck in a time loop (one of my favourite tropes ;) and have limited time to figure out what’s going on and how to carry your progress over to the next loop. There are multiple endings, and they’re wildly different!
10. The Room by Fireproof Games.
A puzzle game that feels very physical, with a crazy amount of knobs, buttons, levers, and even some tilt and motion-control puzzles (I played on iPad). It’s not the kind of game I usually play, because the story is minimal. But the atmosphere is fantastic, and fiddling with all those mechanisms and unlocking new areas is incredibly fun and rewarding.
Shockingly good advice from Hariette
2026-Jan-12, Monday 04:33( As always, we grade her on a curve because she's usually so terrible )
Trip, part 2
2026-Jan-11, Sunday 21:44( Hangzhou )
( Logistical stuff )
Catalogue check (2024) update
2026-Jan-12, Monday 16:58I've managed to winkle out some of the books that didn't get spotted while I was doing the catalogue check in 2024 (which finished, for logistics reasons, in about February 2025).
And I've just looked at the number of tags that I have (>2K) and decided that is ridiculous. The first pass I'm doing is changing all the old location tags to [year] - last seen (not the 'unchecked/not yet seen' ones, those I'm going to think about some more). Because where any book was in 2021 (etc) is obviously not right, or I would have found it there in 2024. Once I've done that for all years prior to 2024, I'm going to go poke at the various 'unchecked' tags and see what is there.
other things I've noticed that I want to reorder
- mythology should be
mythology - [country] - awards should be
awards: [name] - I have
juvenileandkidsandjunior fictionand possibly some others, as well as a set ofage: [...]categories; need to think what I want to do here.
Fandom Snowflake Challenge: Why I'm Participating
2026-Jan-12, Monday 00:50I'm a fangirl who has been involved with fandom for a very long time, started my online fandom journey on LJ in 2003 and I haven't stopped since. As one can see on my profile just a taste of the various fandoms and interests that I'm into.
When it comes to
In previous posts, I have talked about data fandom and fan labour as something inherently linked to&
2026-Jan-12, Monday 03:00In previous posts, I have talked about data fandom and fan labour as something inherently linked to commercialization. In a paper I read, though, I discovered a case where data fandom was used as a tool – both to achieve certain goals on social media directly and to transform the participants’ fannish identity.
When the Dallas police launched the app iWatch Dallas for people to report law-breaking demonstrators, K-pop fans flooded the Dallas police official Twitter account with random K-pop videos—and many of these videos were fan cams. The app was disabled due to “technical issues” within a day, possibly because of such negative reactions on social media (Alexander 2020). Later, many K-pop fans spammed racist, white supremacist Twitter hashtags, such as #WhiteLivesMatter, with fan cams, eventually leading to these tags’ trending under the “K-pop” category on Twitter (Aswad 2020).
Zhang, Muxin. 2024. “Fandom Image Making and the Fan Gaze in Transnational K-pop Fan Cam Culture.” In “Fandom and Platforms,” edited by Maria K. Alberto, Effie Sapuridis, and Lesley Willard, special issue, Transformative Works and Cultures, no. 42. https://doi.org/10.3983/twc.2024.2463.
Fans in general are certainly very aware of discourse about them and their activities – that is the entire premise of this blog. It is more of a question of whether a transformative approach is accessible, not if we are aware that alternatives might be needed.
However, Zhang also shows that this use of fancams was not universal among stans. The difference is made between North American fans and South Korean fans and this difference is attributed to the identification with an idol’s success.
This identification might be very well grounded in the way the industry operates.
(…) fan leaders are portrayed as individual opinion leaders or fan clubs (formal or informal) who set the agenda and organize the collective action of daily fan activities, while they also function as intermediaries maintaining a close communication with the idol’s media companies and uniting individual fans.
Wu, Xueyin. 2021. “Fan Leaders’ Control on Xiao Zhan’s Chinese Fan Community.” Transformative Works and Cultures, no. 36. https://doi.org/10.3983/twc.2021.2053.
Because of this coordination between the media company and fan leaders, the activities of fans can have an impact of the idol’s reputation and thus success. This responsibility is not shared by the North American fans.
In this way, while all the fans described can identify with their bias but it is an identification that is expressed in different ways which leaves them with different ways of expressing their fannish identity. Though, we are only looking at one case here, it already reveals some of the complexities and nuances we can encounter in fandom.
Szabó Dorottya
Tuning, tuning
2026-Jan-12, Monday 00:40The old strings were very old. I decided to restring the whole thing because the harp just didn't sound good, no matter how in tune the strings were. Harsh is probably the best word for what I was hearing. The strings were all, to a greater or lesser degree, corroded, fragile, and/or stubbornly set in their ways. I had to use my small pliers and a good bit of force to get some of the strings out of the string anchor; and some of the strings broke in a way that left just enough in the pegs that getting ahold of the bits to get them out was challenging. Of course, those bits had to be removed before a new string could be fed through the hole and the peg tightened.
So it took a while!
But now all the strings are new and shiny, and each one sounds a lot better than the one it replaced. If played one at a time, which, of course, is not how you play an autoharp. 36 steel strings put a lot of tension on the frame, which, once the strings have settled in means the weather doesn't pull an autoharp out of tune nearly as much as a guitar. Not having tuning pegs designed for fingers also helps, since no light bump will detune a string. Usually you can let autoharp strings remain for quite a while, unless they break, and all instrument strings break from time to time. I have gotten pretty good at replacing one string at a time and manually stretching it so it settles down pretty quickly.
But all new strings? All stretching and settling in at the same time? It's going to be a while before I get the thing enough in tune to play a whole song without wincing. And then I bet I'll have to retune it after each song for a bit, since the strings will stretch differently in response to being played at first.
So I'm once again remembering my sister's adage: Slow progress is still progress.
Still, I am happy to have gotten this far. Maybe tomorrow I'll replace the strings on the guitar I play most often. Those strings don't sound as good as they used to either. And it won't take anywhere near so long to retune and get the strings settled in!
Update: This evening's retuning wasn't as bad as I expected. Maybe I did a better job of stretcing them as I put them in than I thought! Fingers crossed!
(no subject)
2026-Jan-11, Sunday 03:23We don't know the reason; there was no fight or misunderstanding or awkward interactions. We in turn no longer invite them to our smaller occasions. Weddings and other big occasions are different; everyone is invited.
However, every time we are celebrating our birthdays or anniversary, my husband starts insisting on inviting his brother. No matter how many times I remind him that they no longer invite us, he says it is still his only sibling and it's important to him that his brother be there.
I refuse to agree to invite them, the only exception I make is for my husband's birthday because that's him we are celebrating so he can invite them if he wants. They attend his birthday but do not reciprocate. It's very weird.
I still cannot figure out why it's important to have people at our table that do not care about seeing us at theirs.
Can you help me formulate a response that would stop my husband from asking me to invite them? Apparently my saying no every time for years and explaining why is not sufficient. I am tired of these arguments, and it does not change anything. I need an ironclad reason that he will agree with.
– Tired of the One-Way Street
( Read more... )
the personal stuff
2026-Jan-12, Monday 15:19Which, I had generally a good week, got some good writing in, managed to rejig the part of Nullifae 1 which had been giving me trouble, and have sorted out the "losing the mentor" part of the story and how we get there. Also, discovered a few things that will be relevant in later books (when we get there). A relief.
On Tuesday, B1 and I went to see the Ashes 5th Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground, had a good day of watching Aussies bat, a couple of hundreds gained, one of my sister's favourite cricketers play what could well have been his last innings (but wasn't), and saw Australia get ahead to the tune of about 230 runs - a nice cushion.
On Monday, we lost a chicken.
tw: not a peaceful going
Carambar was supposed to be one of our 'long-lived' girls. We bought two of a newly-developed heritage breed that were supposed to lay many eggs while still keeping going. It might be that their bloodlines may need a bit more breeding to properly settle, because the first one died with possible neurological issues having never laid an egg, and Carambar only laid for about 12 months before developing complications with laying, and needing a chip to keep her from laying.
She was otherwise perfectly healthy and surviving well. Unfortunately, while both B1 and myself were away from home, the neighbour's dog got out, chased her out of the yard and under the house. When we got her out (after the neighbour came and reclaimed her dog), she had been bitten about the head enough that she was bleeding and injured, and when we got her to the vet it turned out her wing was broken. We didn't have the resources and energy to try to get her back to health, so we had to have her put down.
The neighbour paid for the vet bill, but we're still furious about her dogs. She's nearly 70 and has two bouncing, energetic young spaniel-type dogs that she has always struggled to keep on a leash, and which she's been nice white lady oblivious to anything but her joy in gossipy conversation when walking them. They're probably companionship for her - her son is married, and her daughter self-terminated about 7 years ago - but she's not up to controlling them, and they keep getting out of her place. She's always apologetic, but that doesn't stop the fact that one of our chickens died because of her dogs!
Anyway. That was the start of the week.
By Wednesday the temperatures were rising, by Saturday it was nutso. 42C by 6pm...and then our street power went off. Just our street. *sigh*
A friend invited me over for a swim, and I spent a lovely hour in her pool with her youngest daughter, and then about 20 minutes discussing politics with her husband, brother-in-law, and older daughter. And when I went home, the power was back on again.
Today - first day back at work - has been tiring, but nothing dire. I did go to the gym this morning, and ended up walking 1. I have a call to Jury Duty, but I suspect I can't get out of it this time. Although my boss has just messaged me - apparently contracting is considered 'self-employed', so I might have a chance not to lose 3 months worth of income...




