Sunday, September 24, 2023

Better later than never: Twenty-one years of the Literary Saloon

 Learn how to process your own JWST photos at home, "no technical experience required to start"


Deadline's Robert Lang compiled a bunch of short films (that you can watch for free online) that were later developed into feature-length films like Reservoir Dogs, Marcel the Shell with Shoes On, Boogie Nights, Bottle Rocket, Napoleon Dynamite, and District 9.


Dragon Pizza owner on Portnoy feud: 'I'm receiving death threats'


 Fake Meat Is an Even Bigger Fraud Than I Thought. “Upside Foods, some employees say, lies about how their faux chicken is created. Why?”


What Makes Life Tick? Mitochondria May Keep Time for Cells Quanta


Nobel disease: Why some of the world’s greatest scientists eventually go crazy Big Think


Tolerogenic Vaccines: An Exciting New Approach to Autoimmune Diseases Eric Topic


       BookTube more important than BookTok ? 

       'BookTok' has been getting lots of attention -- ‘I can’t stress how much BookTok sells’: teen literary influencers swaying publishers David Barnett reported in The Observerjust on Sunday -- but now Ella Creamer writes in The Guardian that a Nielsen Report finds YouTube more popular than TikTok for young book buyers
       Yes: "34% of people aged between 14 and 25 find new reads using the video platform YouTube" -- while: "TikTok and Instagram were used by 32% and 27% of participants respectively". This seems like a margin-of-error kind of difference (and it's based on a "survey", i.e. self-reported and hence of dubious reliability), but, hey, whatever gets 'em reading, right ? 


  Twenty-one years of the Literary Saloon 

       I can finally raise a glass not just to but with the Literary Saloon, which today has reached the legal drinking age in the US -- yes, the first post went up at this weblog-annex to the complete review (itself a twentieth-century relic) exactly twenty-one years ago today ! 
       Glad to see that there are quite a few regulars who still drop by -- and that many others at least take the occasional look. 
       Cheers ! 


    And Other Stories' redesign 


       At the venerable publisher, And Other Stories' Series Design Revealed: Putting Words First -- and I have to say, I like it ! (And I am always for putting words first !) 



       KulturPass 

       Germany recently followed in the footsteps of several other European countries in offering a 'Culture-Pass' to youths once they hit a certain age: the German KulturPass allows anyone who turns 18 this year to get €200 which they can use for any kind of cultural expenditure they like. Unsurprisingly, as elsewhere, it's proven to be quite a hit. 
       At Börsenblatt they sum up the early results, with 130,000 youths having taken up the offer (about a third of those eligible), leading to a turnover of €2.9 million. (There's apparently a more detailed report in the Süddeutsche Zeitung, but it's paywalled.) 
       The top items the youths went for: books and comics (alas, not broken down how many of each ...), 83,000; movie tickets, 57,000; and theater and concert tickets 25,000. Nice to see that 25 bought sheet music -- and interesting to see that twice as many spent the money on musical instruments (ca. 700) as did on CDs/records/etc. (ca. 350). A bit disappointing to see that museums and parks weren't that popular: only a thousand takers/goers. 


       Graphomania 

       At The Guardian Politics-author Adam Thirlwell finds ‘We’re gripped by graphomania’: why writing became an online contagion and how we can contain it
       Writing and disseminating several hundred thousand words a year in reviews and Literary Saloon weblog posts I'm afraid I definitely count/contribute to this graphomanic excess; I suppose one could call what I do "manic reading, which leads to even more graphomania" ..... But maybe what I do is also part of the: "proliferation of small-scale writing