Sunday, June 30, 2024

A Silence - Dune director throws shade at the Deadpool & Wolverine popcorn bucket

A Silence - Emmanuelle Devos and Daniel Auteuil

Un silence


The end is near … Beer consumption in the Czech Republic plummets to a record low




For all the conveniences of streaming, there’s still something to be said about venturing out to see a film at a movie theater. Sure, there isn’t an endless amount of choice, and you can’t pause when something else requires your attention but seeing a compelling film on the silver screen is its own treat.

On 29 and 30 June, the Palace cinemas are  making it more affordable to enjoy that experience. Antonio Zeccola's Palace offers discounted $8 tickets. 


Dune director throws shade at the Deadpool & Wolverine popcorn bucket

 There’s a war brewing in Hollywood and we’re not talking about how AI will inevitably kill us all by plagiarizing The Joker’s chaos plans from The Dark Knight. We’re talking about the popcorn bucket war.

The latest shot came from Dune director Denis Villeneuve in a red carpet interview in which he called the Wolverine & Deadpool popcorn bucket “horrific” and called the Dune buckets “unmatchable.”

Villeneuve did an impromptu interview with eTalkCTV where a reporter asked him about the feud that’s been brewing between him and Deadpool star Ryan Reynolds over their respective popcorn receptacles. The reporter showed Villeneuve a picture of the Deadpool & Wolverine bucket featuring the yellow Wolverine’s head and his gaping maw full of some of Orville Redenbacher’s finest. Villeneuve said he doesn’t have anything against the bucket but he thinks they are just riding the coattails he unfurled when the Dune sandworm popcorn bucket blew up the Internet.


“I’m not saying I don’t like the bucket,” Villeneuve said. “I’m just saying it was difficult to beat the Dune bucket. It was like one of a kind.”

He’s got a point. Popcorn buckets weren’t even a movie going craze until the release of the Dune 2 sandworm bucket, a popcorn tub that looks like a sex toy punishment designed by Pinhead from the Hellraiser movies. It sparked a whole new marketing trend for the struggling movie theater industry that’s been trying to fight the convenient onslaught of streaming media. Theaters and studios produced special buckets for other movies like Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’s ghost trap and ECTO-1 buckets, Wonka’s Willy Wonka hat bucket and Inside Out 2’s core memory receptacle bucket.

Starring the Computer: a catalog of computers used in movies

No tree, it is said, can grow to heaven unless its roots reach down to hell.


       New World Literature Today

       The July/August issue of World Literature Today is now out, with a focus on International Horror in Translation. 
       And, of course, there's the always interesting book review section.


Starring the Computer: a catalog of computers used in movies and TV shows. For instance: “The first episode of Andor has a heavily modified Tandy TRS-80 Model 


French potter Jacques Monneraud makes ceramic pots that look like teapots, vases, and pitchers made from cardboard and scotch tape. He offers these pots for sale, but they’re unsurprisingly sold out right now. More about Monneraud & his work on his website and Instagram. (via @presentandcorrect)


Corey Costelloe - Spiritual Chappell 20 - Since leaving Hunter St Hospitality (Rockpool Bar & Grill), the group’s former culinary director has been keeping himself busy


Precision ultrasound could treat deep parts of brain without surgery New Scientist


Jazz Remains the Sound of Modernism The Millions




 Kinky Friedman, Proudly Eccentric Texas Singer-Songwriter, Dead at 79.

Exit quotes


Fake …


2 1ST CENTURY RELATIONSHIPS:  I Was Content With Monogamy. I Shouldn’t Have Been

Using LiDAR data from the US Geological Survey and a site called ReliefViz, a Reddit user created this lovely blue and greyscale shaded relief map of Manhattan (and the surrounding area). It’s worth clicking through to explore the full-size image.


 Hockley Clarke on his relationship with a blackbird who lived in his garden. “There was perfect trust between us, a source of joy to me, and it must have been a comfort to him. Perhaps birds understand more than we think.”


Every Kind of Bridge Explained in 15 Minutes


Walmart is switching to electronic price tagsthat “allow employees to change prices as often as every ten seconds”. No one wants this!! No one wants surge pricing on ice cream and price increases on items already in your cart.

For 22 years reflecting on 1980: You Can’t Go Home Again

You can learn a line
from a win
and a book
from a defeat.
~ Paul Brown who shared with deep bloggers the old saying "no good deed goes unpunished."


Media dragon started in the evening on 30 June 2002 at the end of financial year Down Under …  (Czech Out Media Dragon Museum)

In the world of blogging, 22 years is a momentous milestone … and in the Internet years MEdia Dragon is thousand years old relic …  Back in June 2011 Steve Jobs observed that Media Dragon was even back then craziest and ancient


Our Complicated Relationship With Nostalgia

Even if nostalgia is a less “dangerous emotion” today than it seems to have been to the Swiss soldiers, it well deserves to be taken seriously and sympathetically. - The Guardian

Lou Martinez’s favourite President Joe Bidden awarded posthumously Steve in 2022 The Presidential Medal of Freedom which is the highest US honor that can be given to a civilian


When you consider that statistics show 80% of new blogs fail within 18 months following their launch, it really puts into perspective how massive over two decade of blogging is.


The best preparation for blogging is a lifetime of paying attention and sticking your neck out - have your skin in the game of level playing media fields.  Crossing the deadly Iron Curtain also helps to ignore even no one was reading anything I wrote …


Over those twenty two years, I’ve written well over 15,000 posts, some brief, some long, some silly, some serious and linked to some  impressive bloggers, writers, heroes

From Cold War River to Sultry Antipodean Sea 


“”You learn something every day" is the motto of this blog. As courageous Kate Braverman observed: 

"Writing is like crime. The page is about what you can get away with. We break and enter, transgress, autopsy the living and dead, rob, exchange identities, lie, confess, steal. The arts of writing and successful crime are the same. Opportunity. Robbery. Seizure. Con. Misdirection. Theft. Fiction is a form of fraud, the most elegant, exquisite and complicated forms of creative fraud."


Why put up with the grief that writing a blog guarantees I’ll get? Funding the Future

Political and philosophical blogs especially have always been an incredible source of inspiration for me.

Note for example that philosophy blog Daily Nous Turned 10 in 2024 AD!


Blogging appealed to me because it was positioned in this unique digital space somewhere between storytelling, scrap-booking, learning, helping me to listen more, and finding brothers and sisters who make the world tick ...

It is hard not to be appreciative of the little engine community of Media Dragons that could when you consider that there are over 1.5 billion blogs worldwide.  About 30-32% of those bloggers are in the US. Australian 🇦🇺 bloggers like me comprise of 1% of that total.  I am also in the 7.1% group of bloggers aged over 50Over 7 million blog posts are published every single day! 77% of internet users read blogs. 


When I think of who I was back in 2002, how much I’ve changed, how much my life has changed, how much the world has changed, it’s a little surreal. When I wrote my first blog post, Kindles and iPhones didn’t exist. And computer monitors were still fat and chunky and the operating systems were in towers. I still used a camera with film of my two daughters that had to be developed. I’m pretty sure accessing the internet was still via dial-up. Gracious! That was a long time ago. I was based at Brisvegas then, lived such a different life - as philosopher keep telling us past is such a foreign country 

 I certainly didn’t anticipate the adventure my journey would be. . . Almost three (3) Million views from all corners of the world even the King of Bohemia did not reach as far as this dragon-folklore fuelled blog  😇


How lucky to be alive at the same time as Vaclav Havel and characters like Steve Jobs who  said the following in a 1994 interview with the Santa Clara Valley Historical Association:

When you grow up you tend to get told the world is the way it is and your job is just to live your life inside the world. Try not to bash into the walls too much. Try to have a nice family life, have fun, save a little money.

That's a very limited life. Life can be much broader once you discover one simple fact, and that is - everything around you that you call life, was made up by people that were no smarter than you. And you can change it, you can influence it, you can build your own things that other people can use.

The minute that you understand that you can poke life and actually something will, you know if you push in, something will pop out the other side, that you can change it, you can mold it. That's maybe the most important thing. It's to shake off this erroneous notion that life is there and you're just gonna live in it, versus embrace it, change it, improve it, make your mark upon it.

I think that's very important and however you learn that, once you learn it, you'll want to change life and make it better, cause it's kind of messed up, in a lot of ways. Once you learn that, you'll never be the same again.


Louise Dodson Nov 5, 1996 NSW joins Canberra on the Internet

The NSW Parliament has now joined the Federal Parliament with a range of parliamentary information available on the Internet. However, the NSW Parliament World Wide Web site will provide the most comprehensive information. 
It includes explanations about the operations, procedures and legislative processes in NSW, historical information, biographical information about all the ministers and members, daily Hansards, business papers, bills before the House and daily "whats on" information for both the Legislative Assembly and Legislative Council. 
"The development of this site gives the people of NSW unprecedented access to information about the workings of democracy in this State," the president of the Legislative Council, Mr Max Willis, said. 
The speaker of the Legislative Assembly, Mr John Murray, promised it would be updated daily.

"This will be a valuable education and business resource," he said. The NSW Public Accounts Committee's Mr Jozef Imrich said the Web technology gives users the opportunity to bring government within easy reach of people irrespective of geographic barriers. 
In the United States, the Government has developed an Interactive Citizen's Handbook, as an electronic guide through government agencies and departments to bring a new "town hall-style democracy" to the people. 
The versatile Internet is also being used for telemedicine services.Australian medical technology company, Micromedical Industries, is using advanced Internet technologies for accessing doctors via a modem. 
For instance, the Internet can be used for a heart check-up by uploading one's ECG to a central server. Mr Peter Ludemann, the chairman of Micromedical Industries, said: "We have paved the way for a system which is accessible to remote communities, the home bound or even the world's fitness enthusiasts who want access to online medical expertise."

Almost three-million clicks and counting for MEdia Dragon 🐉 

I am old enough to remember theofficial birthday of the internet 1st January 1983. The period takes me back to manual media clippings area at the NSW Parliamentary Library. Although the Internet  wasn't until 10 years later, in 1993 when it became available to the public. My first parliamentary email address was for work shortly after that date. I remember using the terrible Alta Vista search engine because Google did not come along until 1998 when we invaded Czech 🇨🇿 and Slovak Republics.



A global, 16-year study1 of 2.4 million people has found that Internet use might boost measures of well-being, such as life satisfaction and sense of purpose — challenging the commonly held idea that Internet use has negative effects on people’s welfare.
Is the internet bad for you?

“A good, blogger, intel analyst, writer always works at the impossible.”


If you think you're too small to make a difference, try sleeping in a closed room with a mosquito

Accents Can Be Contagious

That foreign accent students sometimes come home with after studying abroad isn't (or isn't only) an affectation. - The Atlantic (MSN)

Fifteen Year Blogiversary for Whispering Gums, with a Giveaway


Brat from Bratislava


Quoting the social theorist Bruno Latour, Becker encourages us to think of time as less like an “irreversible arrow” and more like a “plate of spaghetti.” The past is perpetually “recombined, reinterpreted, and reshuffled,” Latour ventures; it loops around and doubles back on the present. All this may sound like postmodern esotericism, but the idea of the past overlapping and entwining with the present is not some recent import from French theory. The rabbinic scholar Lynn Kaye has found a similar temporal flexibility in the Talmud (for example, in the Passover rituals with which Jews attempt to merge the present with the long-ago events of Exodus). More plainly, we can see in the built environment of any city the commingling of past and present. 

You Can’t Go Home Again The uses of nostalgia



Whatever the history, whatever the nuances, whatever the charged sentiments associated with political realities, the thirst for freedom is very simple: It means believing that if regimes built 10ft wall you will create a 12ft ladder




When Online Content Disappears

“38% of webpages that existed in 2013 are no longer accessible a decade later The internet is an unimaginably vast repository of modern life, with hundreds of billions of indexed webpages. But even as users across the world rely on the web to access books, images, news articles and other resources, this content sometimes disappears from view. A new Pew Research Center analysis shows just how fleeting online content actually is:

  • A quarter of all webpages that existed at one point between 2013 and 2023 are no longer accessible,as of October 2023. In most cases, this is because an individual page was deleted or removed on an otherwise functional website.
  • For older content, this trend is even starker. Some 38% of webpages that existed in 2013 are not available today, compared with 8% of pages that existed in 2023.

This “digital decay” occurs in many different online spaces. We examined the links that appear on government and news websites, as well as in the “References” section of Wikipedia pages as of spring 2023…” [beSpacific – free – solo owned, researched, edited, published online since – 2002]


Without Main Street media most blogs would be up the creek or cold river

Saturday, June 29, 2024

I am always searching for something Wild

Hot on the heels of the inaugural Festival of Gardens and Nature in Co Laois last month (which she co-founded with Minnie Preston) garden designer Catherine FitzGerald, of Lutyens & Fitzgerald in London and Glin Castle, Limerick, has identified three trends to think about when designing or reframing your garden this summer:

Gravel gardens are genius: planting into gravel and sand rather than soil means less weeding, less maintenance and less compost! Just choose the right plants that are adapted to gravel: hummocks of santolina, rosemary, cardoons and creeping thyme, Iris pallida and fennel. Seed about with evening primrose and California poppies. Think Derek Jarman’s garden on the strand at Dungeness in Kent or look up what Peter Korn is doing near Malmo in Sweden.”

Malchkeoun How to fold a rotating origami star


       Literary bars in Tokyo

       At The Japan News Takafumi Masaki writes on Tokyo's Literary Bars: A Place Famous Writers Grabbed Drinks, Gained Inspiration; Many Artists Still Gather to Discuss Their Crafts
       But: "in recent years, many of the bars have gone out of business" .....



Plant single flowers for pollinators to enjoy: purer, simpler, lovelier and better for bees and insects. Think roses, poppies and gorgeous pale pink Peonia Nymph”.



“Natural organic swimming pools, surrounded by native plants: glorious stands of yellow flag iris and purple loosestrife, marsh marigold, and oxegenators such as hornwort, sweet galingale, and water crowfoot. Swim in clear water surrounded by swallows diving to drink, dragon flies, damsel flies, and if you are very lucky, newts! This is the best thing you can do for biodiversity, apart from planting a tree.”


How To Design Your Garden For Summer, According To Catherine FitzGerald 

Catherine FitzGerald's Glin Castle Gardens Are a Living Wonderland
 How this landscape designer grows her family’s castle gardens along the River Shannon into an enchanting setting bridging generations.



In theory, landscape designer Catherine FitzGerald and I are meeting at her home in Wiltshire to talk about how gardens portray character, ahead of a talk she is giving next month at Fenton House, one of the oldest houses in Hampstead. In many ways it is the picture-perfect example of English rus in urbe — the countryside in the city. Irish-born FitzGerald has been a landscape designer for 30 years, working in particular on historic gardens
In practice, it is hard to take one’s eyes off her garden. There are plumes of foxgloves and fennel; delicate flowers that fix you with their eyes; roses sprawled over a brick wall, cut with the acid green of euphorbia; and alleyways between grasses for the eye to travel. 
Look one way and it is a Gainsborough painting, the other a Poussin. There are freshly shorn sheep in a field behind, a young orchard and meadow and a striking long pond with a large terracotta urn at its head. It is a natural swimming pool commissioned by her husband, the actor Dominic West. 
With the dimensions of a regular pool, it is sealed by pond liner, layered in gravel and planted with reeds. Birds, dragonflies and damselflies share the pool with the swimmer. “House martins and swallows swoop down for the insects while you are swimming,” says FitzGerald.

What is surprising is that the garden feels like it has been there for 100 years but was a lockdown project, a product of both her expertise and restlessness. She and West had bought the house, a former brewery, around eight years ago. FitzGerald wanders around pointing out mistakes she has made. A pathway here for a drive that shouldn’t be there, flowers that she keeps digging up to replant somewhere else. “Certain trees have been moved seven times,” she admits. “Gardening is not always this love for me. It’s a kind of passion and fury.”

 
Managed gardens and landscapes are as much an expression of what is going on with the owner or caretaker of a building as what is planted.
FitzGerald’s CV includes some high-end work: Glenarm Castle, a rewilded landscape for cabin retreats in Scotland; and gardens at very smart west London addresses. But Hillsborough Castle in Belfast, Northern Ireland, is an example of a place that needed extra love. A little-used titular home of the Northern Ireland Secretary of State, it was the setting for various stages of the Anglo-Irish peace talks. 
“It seemed an austere and functional place,” says FitzGerald — “a lot of gravel, not many plants.” She and her colleagues worked on and off for five years. Espaliered fruit trees were brought; the bounty from the gardens went into the kitchens. The river was planted with tree ferns and palms. Gravel paths were filled with seeding plants and then, she recounts, there were “bees and insects and scent and grasses moving in the wind”.

It’s really transformative — a softening,” she says, not just of the garden but for the people and how they experience the building and the history. 
Fenton House, by contrast, has a legacy of being rotund with contentment. Now a National Trust property, it was originally a merchant’s house, before passing into the hands of nobility to gain the reputation of being one of the finest houses in Hampstead. FitzGerald will be leading a guided walk through its gardens, which include an orchard, sunken rose garden, greenhouse and immaculate lawn. 
“You take a journey through it,” says FitzGerald. It goes past formal borders, the greenhouse with new seedling being propagated, past the vegetable beds and the orchard. 
Most houses enveloped by the London sprawl lost their land to development. Fenton did not. “It appeals if you like the idea of rus in urbe, of town in country. Do we live in the town with its corruption and its politics or do we go off and tend vineyards?” Fenton has both. “It evokes that fantasy about the ideal life where you have both friends and culture, but also your beds, your herbs.” A life with everything on hand.

Gardens reflect their owners’ characters, but there is also a change in the type of person who becomes a garden or landscape designer. FitzGerald is, she eventually reluctantly admits, in charge of Glin Castle in Ireland. Her father Desmond was Knight of Glin but, with no sons, the title passed with him. 

Her original passion for gardening had derived from watching others working there: “Generations of people, especially women, had contributed to it.” Directionless in her twenties, she signed up to RHS’s gardening course, at Wisley, in Surrey. “I feel like it saved me.” She also did an Architectural Association course on the history of landscape and conservation and went to work for garden designer Arabella Lennox-Boyd — “a real crucible for learning” — and works in partnership with Mark Lutyens, a landscape architect.
Looking back on her training, she and her peer group were drawn from a particular group, usually already connected to the land: “Those who wanted serious training intended to become head gardeners or work on an estate.” 
Among her friend group, there was minimal interest in gardens. It was all fashion and culture. “Whereas now,” she says, “because everyone is so aware of what we’ve been doing to the planet, how important it is to plant trees and to leave grass to grow long, younger people are becoming more connected to that.”
She is particularly excited by the new culture of the roving gardener, not tied to an estate but roaming the country, counselling about plants and spreading ideas far and wide. It has disrupted the system. 

Her friend Jonny Bruce is one. He comes around every once in a while. “It’s like garden psychology. He’ll come. We’ll do a day’s gardening and then just talk about ideas.” He brings plants from somewhere else, he passes hers on to others. “It’s very cross-pollinating between people.”
FitzGerald and her friend Minnie Preston held the inaugural Festival of Gardens and Nature at Ballintubbert, County Laois, in central Ireland this year. Less of a “serious boffin-y conference” — as well as the deep dives into plants, the programming crossed boundaries of design, history, ecology, rewilding and plant hunting. Jimi Blake talked about woodland plants; the Land Gardeners, a duo from west London, about soil health. It drew an unusually mixed crowd. “A proper festival,” she says proudly. Folk musician Johnny Flynn came and played.
Her own garden takes on this energy and inclusiveness. There are cardoons for structure and diaphanous fennel. The wild flower meadow in the new orchard has some non-natives — giant inula, marsh euphorbia — in it. She likes startling combinations of colour.
The natural pool had came about after West contacted David Pagan Butler, a pioneer of natural swimming pools online. There’s also a pig pen round the back and a greenhouse. The completeness of the garden — for food, flowers and life — resembles Fenton in many ways except for its refusal of contentedness as an end point. 
FitzGerald says “I’m always searching for something wild. Gardens are all about change — the minute they become static, they lose their spirit.” 
Catherine FitzGerald will be speaking at the Idler Festival; idler.co.uk