Sunday, December 14, 2025

Requiem for Early Blogging

 Tyranny fears  people who. stand together.


“Eating the right foods in the proper quantities, 16th-century Britons believed, balanced mind and soul. So in Shakespeare’s plays, roasts, ales, and pies are not props, but clues to characters’ souls, moods, and motivations.”


Requiem for Early Blogging. “I still look for people with early blogger energy, though — people willing to make an effort to understand the world and engage in a way that isn’t a performance, or trolling, or outright grifting.”


The Last People Before the Internet Kneeling Bus


Lots to like about Variety’s list of 100 Best Comedy Movies of All Time, but Coming to America at #46 and no Trading Places at all make me question the list’s credibility.


The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Disney+, Amazon, HBO Max, Peacock and More in December


It’s Never Over, Jeff Buckley
Starts streaming: Dec. 4

The singer-songwriter Jeff Buckley died in 1997 at age 30, leaving behind an astonishing debut album, “Grace,” that found a devoted yet relatively small fandom in his lifetime. Since his death, that record — along with some scattered live recordings and unfinished songs — have been perennially popular, with Buckley’s cover of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” becoming a modern pop standard. The director Amy Berg faced a challenge in making her documentary “It’s Never Over, Jeff Buckley,” given that her subject’s career didn’t last long enough to generate a lot of archival footage. Fortunately, Buckley’s mother, Mary Guibert — along with some of the musician’s girlfriends — provided Berg with some rare video, audio and photos, to help tell the story of a phenomenal musical talent who sometimes felt crushed by the pressures of greatness.
In 1996, Buckley worked on his second album with the working title My Sweetheart the Drunkin New York City with Tom Verlaine as the producer. In February 1997, he resumed work after moving to Memphis, Tennessee. On May 29, while awaiting the arrival of his band from New York, Buckley drowned while swimming in the Wolf River, a tributary of the Mississippi. Posthumous releases include a collection of four-track demos and studio recordings for My Sweetheart the Drunk, and reissues of Graceand the Live at Sin-é EP. 

Key Aspects of Jeff Buckley in Australia:
  • Iconic 1995 Tour: Buckley's debut Australian tour was a cultural phenomenon, with sold-out shows in Sydney and Melbourne, featuring his haunting "Hallelujah" and classics like "Grace" and "Lover, You Should Have Come Over".
  • Enduring Legacy: Australia became a significant market for Buckley's music, and his performances are still remembered as transformative.
  • Tributes & Commemorations: Events like Katie Noonan's "Jeff Buckley's Grace Tour" and radio specials (e.g., from Double J) celebrate his work, marking anniversaries of his visits.
  • Books & Documentaries: Australian author Jeff Apter wrote A Pure Drop, a definitive biography, while films like It's Never Over, Jeff Buckley have been shown in Australian cinemas. 
Why Australia Matters to His Story:
  • Deep Fandom: Australian fans felt a profound connection to his artistry, experiencing his unique vocal and emotional depth firsthand.
  • Critical Acclaim: His tours were pivotal in cementing his legendary status, even posthumously, with many Aussies regretting missing him live.
  • In essence, Australia embraced Jeff Buckley, and he left an indelible mark on its music scene, a bond that continues to be celebrated. 

How the Elite Behave When No One Is Watching: Inside the Epstein Emails. They reveal “a power elite practiced at disregarding pain” who have “learned to look away from so much other abuse and suffering” to protect their network of power

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Nothing Better Than a Whole Lot of Books: In Praise of Bibliomania

 Do Africa’s Mass Animal Migrations Extend Into Deep Time? Sapiens


Modern social science finds that the 13th-century theologian’s recipe for “imperfect happiness” turns out to be perfect.


A tour of author Bri Lee's cosy bookish sanctuary in Kings Cross


Civicus monitors the health of civic societies and their freedoms around the world. In their annual assessment on civic freedoms for 2025, they downgraded the United Statesfrom “narrowed” to “obstructed”.

The CIVICUS Monitor has downgraded the United States of America’s civic space rating, reflecting a sharp deterioration of fundamental freedoms in the country. The People Power Under Attack report now rates the USA as “Obstructed” following a year of sweeping executive actions, restrictive laws, and aggressive crackdowns on free speech and dissent.

The downgrade comes following Donald Trump’s return to office in January 2025, which triggered a wave of measures undermining democratic institutions and civic freedoms. The report flags a drastic surge in violations of the rights to freedom of expression, association, and peaceful assembly.

“The backsliding on rule of law and fundamental freedoms in the United States is truly alarming,” said Mandeep Tiwana, secretary general of CIVICUS. “We are witnessing a rapid and systematic attempt to stifle civic freedoms that Americans have come to take for granted, such as critiquing authorities and protesting peacefully.”

From an article in the Guardian on the report:

The report cited militarized crackdowns on protests in the US, pointing to Donald Trump’s deployment of the national guard to Los Angeles and other cities, as well as the widespread use of ICE agents across gatherings and immigrant communities.

It further highlighted escalating restrictions on free speech across college campuses, particularly around Palestinian solidarity activism.

“Universities have suspended student groups and opened investigations under broad and vague accusations of ‘material support for terrorism.’ Foreign-born students and faculty have been disproportionately targeted, facing disciplinary actions, visa threats, and professional retaliation for supporting Palestinian rights,” the report stated.

Civicus moreover warned that media freedoms were under mounting pressure nationwide, citing the Federal Communications Commission’s threats to revoke broadcast licenses and Trump’s lawsuits against various media companies.

It also pointed to Trump’s revocation of funding for public broadcasters including NPR and PBS, as well as the new White House Wire, an administration-run news website that promotes positive news about itself.



MICROBIOME NEWS:  Which gut microbes matter most? Large study ranks bacteria by health and diet links


Nothing Better Than a Whole Lot of Books: In Praise of Bibliomania

Literary Hub: Ed Simon Considers the Many Different Ways an Obsession Can Manifest. “Desiderius Erasmus lived his happiest months from late 1507 into 1508 at the Venetian print-shop of Aldus Manutius. A peripatetic scholar, the Dutch scholar had lived in Rotterdam and London, Basel and Paris, true to the dictum that where the humanist goes there is his home, but it was the smudgy, dirty, cacophonous, and chaotic shop on Calla della Chiesa near the filthy Piazza Sant’ Agostin that was heaven. 

For nine months, Erasmus spent his short nights in a modest dorm and his long days in the print shop, expanding on his collection of proverbs In Venice, the great work of trade went on along the Grand Canal, or Carnivale revelers in spangled masks clung to the edges of Rialto Bridge like bats in a cave, but at the Aldine Press there was an entirely different city, a motley assortment of some thirty odd scholars (many refugees from Constantinople) that awakened every morning to the bells of San Giacomo dedicated to the cause of reading and producing books. Here they were to “build a library that would have no boundary but the world itself,” remembered Erasmus. 

From the Aldine Press, where both italic print and the semicolon were invented, would come over a thousand titles, including a Greek original of Aristotle’s Poetics in 1508, with its invocation that literature “demands a man…with a touch of madness in him.” One of those copies of Poetics, frayed and damaged until it was barely readable, though still bearing the distinctive watermark of the Aldine Press featuring a dolphin wrapped around an anchor, eventually made its way to a Bologna bookstall. 

As with the metempsychosis of souls from body to body, this copy made its way across libraries and collections until it was purchased for the equivalent of seventy cents in 1970 by a 22-year-old Umberto Eco, this copy of Aristotle joining some 50,000 others as the philosopher built one of the largest personal libraries on the continent. 


“We live for books,” says a character in Eco’s 1980 philosophical Medieval murder mystery The Name of the Rose, that novel directly inspired by his Aristotle discovery. If you’re reading a site named Literary Hub, I’m going to assume that you understand that sentiment well. Plenty of vociferous readers can sustain themselves by library card alone, but the coveting of the physical object of the codex is its own thing. 

Another credo that probably makes sense to you—“When I have a little money, I buy books,” wrote Erasmus in a letter, “and if I have any left, I buy food and clothes.” Those are priorities that Eco internalized, comprehending the paradox of owning more books than you could ever read, of existing in a slipstream between possession and loss. 

This portly, bearded semiotician referred to his “anti-library,” that is the mass of books that Eco would never read but which he owned, their mere presence a humbling reminder of all of that which we’ll never know. “Those who buy only one book, read only that one and then can get rid of it. They simply apply the consumer mentality to books,” writes Eco in How to Travel with a Salmon and Other Essays, but those “who love books know that a book is anything but a commodity.”

Bibliomania, the only hobby which is also a mental health affliction. The person with piles of titles on their nightstand, in their closet, in the trunk of their car. Books in front of books on their bookshelf. “With thought, patience, and discrimination, book passion becomes the signature of a person’s character,” writes Nicholas Basbanes in A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books. “When out of control and indulged to excess, it lets loose a fury of bizarre behavior.” The sort of figure mocked in the engraving “The Bibliomaniac” from Sebastian Brandt’s 1497 satirical allegory The Ship of Fools, a work that Erasmus knew well, where he may have recognized himself in the woodcut. I certainly do, seeing a reflection of my own bookish pursuits from half-a-millennia ago in Brandt’s ridiculous figure in monastic robes and scholarly cap and eyeglasses, sitting behind a desk and shelf piled with books, the figure fanning them as if he’s their servant rather than they his possessions. There was a period when first building my collection from used-book stores and yard-sales, Half Priced Books and Barnes & Noble, where (like the bibliomaniac with his fan) I’d take a ruler and carefully inspect that as my treasures sat on the shelf the back edges of each volume were perfectly lined up so that the pages of the paperbacks wouldn’t curl outward around each other. Today I’m less anal retentive—mostly—but I still dedicate time to continually reorganizing my books, which are stored on nightstand and dresser, in my closets and on tabletops, and in a grand wooden shelf that spans the entirety of our living room. Books crammed in every room, in my campus office, and yes, in my trunk. Frayed paperbacks with mid-century modernist covers purchased from used bookstores and advance reader copies from publishers, massive reference works and beloved hardbacks bought at (that ever increasing) full price…”

Growing plants from seed

 A massive Bronze Age city hidden for 3,500 years just surfaced ScienceDaily 


Hungover from a world that told us we could be anything, we decided to be DJs. We don’t create our own music. We curate playlists, recirculating songs that will make people think we’re cool. And we do this through the labels we wear, the books we read, the people we hang out with, and the opinions we parrot. The DJ figure, ruled by the same logic, is just another celebration of self.

This is why everyone is a DJ now


Aging Out of Fucks: The Neuroscience of Why You Suddenly Can’t Pretend Anymore. “…that point in midlife when your capacity to pretend, perform, and please others starts shorting out like an electrical system that’s finally had enough.”


The billionaire war against death: What happens to the rest of us when the rich stop planning to die?  


14-Year-Old Wins $25,000 for Origami That Can Hold 10,000 Times its Own Weight


Tom Stoppard, The Art of Theater No. 7


Growing plants from seed

YouTuber Boxlapse compiles a bunch of their time-lapse videos of various plants growing into a 22 minute supercut. Plant [and a couple of fungus] names are listed as chapters to the video in the description. As close to touching grass as you can get while watching YouTube.
4360 Days (11.9 years) of growing in total. A compilation of most of my videos from 2025, there is even one unreleased one baked in there somewhere. Thank you everyone for watching and commenting! 
There will be at least one more new video this year coming out in a week or two, and it’s gonna be slightly different than usual. Stuff i use in my videos: https://boxlapse.info/ Some of the links below are affiliate links: Growlights from Horticultural Lighting Group: https://horticulturelightinggroup.com… Use code “BOXLAPSE” for a 15% discount at checkout All music is licensed from epidemic sound, Sign up here: http://share.epidemicsound.com/3pS7H


A deep dive into the time of Trumpian magical realism

 

 A deep dive into the time of Trumpian magical realism

Nikki Barrowclough
December 12, 2025
If you remember, 2015 was a year of horror too. Beheadings, suicide bombings, deadly attacks in central Paris and other cities, the burning to death of a Jordanian pilot in a cage. In Sydney, accountant Curtis Cheng was shot dead outside the NSW Police headquarters by a teenage Islamic State wannabe.
At the end of that awful year, I wrote an opinion piece for this masthead about the imagination of writers in an age of terror, questioning whether novelists were now in a quandary about scenarios they’d dreamt up.

 The French prime minister at the time of the Paris attacks, Manuel Valls, remarked: “The macabre imagination of the masterminds is limitless.” Fourteen years earlier, Ian McEwan, the English novelist, had said the opposite following the 9/11 attacks in the United States. He wrote in The Guardian that “a failure of the imagination” was among the hijackers’ crimes. They wouldn’t have been able to proceed if they’d imagined themselves into the thoughts and feelings of the passengers, he argued.

In contrast, America’s 9/11 Commission Report, made public in 2004, concluded that the most important failure leading to the attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon “was one of imagination”. The national security adviser at the time, Condoleezza Rice, said that no one could have imagined planes being used as missiles.
As a child, I was constantly told I had a vivid imagination. Perhaps this rankled more than I realised. The result is an ongoing fascination with how often a lack of imagination is lamented on the international stage.
In September, this masthead’s Peter Hartcher wrote that The Hague Centre for Strategic Studies had found that European policymakers failed to foresee Vladimir Putin’s full invasion of Ukraine. The invasion “was just beyond imagination”, said one Dutch official.
A different kind of destructive force preoccupied American journalist Brian Stelter, CNN’s chief media analyst, after the rancorous TV debate between Donald Trump and his rival for the presidency, Joe Biden, in September 2020.
“So many of the failures in the Trump age have been failures of imagination,” Stelter wrote. “Many, many people didn’t imagine that he could win and didn’t imagine that he would debase the office in all the ways he has … I failed to imagine that he would stoop to ‘enemy of the people’ rhetoric to wound the nation’s news media.”
Trump had only just got started. Even George Orwell might have blinked at the idea of conspiracy theorists and pro-Trump propagandists routing the Pentagon press corps. But they have. Pete Hegseth’s new policy restricting reporting provoked a walkout by the real journalists at the Pentagon, headquarters of the Department of Defence (sorry, the Department of War).
The irony is that, just this week, Trump trashed “decaying” Europe and its “weak” leaders in an interview with Politico, one of the news organisations evicted from the Pentagon. It was an “extremely unfriendly’ publication”, Trump told his interviewer, Politico’s White House bureau chief, Dasha Burns, thankfully without addressing her as “Piggy”, as he had Bloomberg reporter Catherine Lucey.
His assault on Europe followed the release of his National Security Strategy, which declared that Europe was facing “civilisational erasure” due to immigration, although even this has been trumped by the mind-boggling news that people visiting the US (yes, Australians too) must now provide five years of their phone numbers, 10 years of their email addresses, IP addresses, metadata from electronically submitted photos, biometrics and information about family members. Didn’t Edward Snowden leave any of that data behind?
Donald Rumsfeld would have said the future for “the fake news media” across the US was one of those “unknown unknowns”. And Trump’s threats against writers, as PEN America points out, are aimed at intimidating journalists and their publishers. (In September, a federal judge threw out his $US15 billion lawsuit against The New York Times, four reporters and Penguin Random House, publisher of the book Lucky Loser: How Donald Trump Squandered His Father’s Fortune and Created the Illusion of Success. In October, Trump refiled the lawsuit.)
Things aren’t at the stage – yet – when novelists in the US are grabbed off the streets by masked men. Six years ago, bestselling author Richard North Patterson suggested that Trump had rendered fiction redundant. Perhaps POTUS regards mere fiction writers as harmless.
There’s still the genre of fiction that has served those living in dictatorships well – namely, magical realism, a writer’s martial art – though perhaps novelists feel defeated by reality because it’s non-fiction writers who, in these Trumpian times, relish the fantastical.
This headline, “The imperial audacity of Trump’s magical thinking”, appeared on the London School of Economics and Political Science blog in 2019. Last year, in Foreign Affairs magazine, Peter D. Feaver, professor of political science and public policy at Duke University, wrote that Trump portrayed himself and his team as hard-nosed realists, “but what they offered was less realism than magical realism: a set of fanciful boasts and shallow nostrums”.
“What will fiction be like in the Trump era?” wondered writer Miranda France, back in 2017, in Prospectmagazine. Paying tribute to the Latin American novelists who created the genre, she wrote that railing against tyrannical leaders was the spur to invent new literary forms.
However, if Trump discovers that, unlike academics, novelists’ imaginations are regarded as hallowed ground, he might ask his on-again, off-again friend, the assassin Putin, for advice.
Trump’s first wife, Ivana, claimed her ex-husband kept a copy of Hitler’s collected speeches, My New Order, in his bedside cabinet. No mention of books by the late Mario Vargas Llosa, who grew up under a military dictatorship, and once stood for president in his native Peru. He also won the Nobel Prize for literature in 2010. Not the Peace Prize, Mr President, but hey. In Vargas Llosa’s book of essays, Making Waves, there’s a line that reads: “For almost every writer, memory is the starting point of fantasy, the springboard that launches the imagination on its unpredictable flight towards fiction.”
Today, with humanity imploding, and memories of the world before Trump starting to look surreal, instead of the other way around, and as we learn not to rule out anything any more – Nigel Farage’s Britain? Marine Le Pen’s France? Pauline Hanson’s Australia? Neo-Nazis in our state and territory parliaments? – those unpredictable flights towards fiction may end, as imaginations dry up and writers fall from the skies.
Nikki Barrowclough is a Sydney-based journalist and former staff writer on Good Weekend magazine.


Friday, December 12, 2025

"I'm Big Joe. 58. Long-haul trucker.

 "I'm Big Joe. 58. Long-haul trucker.

Been driving 18-wheelers for 34 years. Sleep in my cab. Eat at truck stops. Talk on CB radio to stay awake.


Lonely job. But someone's gotta move America's stuff. Two years ago, I'm driving through Nebraska. 2 a.m. See a car pulled over. Hazards on. Woman standing outside. Looking scared. I pulled over. She backed away when she saw me. I'm 6'4", 280 pounds, covered in tattoos. I get it. "Ma'am, I'm not stopping to hurt you. I'm stopping to help. What's wrong?" Her car died. Phone dead. She'd been there three hours. Nobody stopped. "Where you headed?" "Hospital. Omaha. My daughter's in emergency surgery. I have to get there." No hesitation. "Get in. I'll take you." "In your truck?" "Safest vehicle on this highway." She hesitated. Then got in. Drove her 60 miles out of my way. Got her there in time. She hugged me hard. "Nobody stops anymore," she cried. "Thank you for seeing me." Got back on the road. Couldn't stop thinking about it. Got on the CB. Told other truckers. "We see everything out here. We should do something." Started a code. "Code Angel" we call it. When truckers see someone broken down, stranded, in trouble, we stop. We help. Word spread. Truckers across the country joined. Last year, we helped 1,200 people. Dead batteries. Out of gas. Medical emergencies. Domestic violence victims escaping. Runaways needing safe transport to shelters. We've got a network now. Truckers, CB radio, truck stops. Someone needs help? We mobilize. Saved six lives last year. People broken down in dangerous spots. Diabetics in crisis. A kidnapping victim we spotted and reported. But here's my favorite story. Last month, I'm at a truck stop. Young kid approaches me. Maybe 19. Scared. "Are you Big Joe?" "Yeah." "You know how to ride in a truck?" His eyes filled. "You'd help me?" "That's what we do." I didn't go to San Francisco. But I got him to a trucker who was. She took him the rest of the way. He made it. Safe. Now there's 4,000 truckers in Code Angel. We've got an app. Dispatchers. Resources. News called us "Guardian Angels of the Highway." But we're just truckers. Doing what's right. That woman in Nebraska? Her daughter survived surgery. She sends me Christmas cards every year. The kid I helped? He's in college now. Studying social work. Says he wants to help invisible people like truckers helped him. I'm Big Joe. I drive a truck. Sleep in parking lots. Smell like diesel. But I learned something. The loneliest roads are where people need help most. And the scariest-looking people are sometimes the ones who stop. So tomorrow, if you break down, if you're stranded, if you're running from something bad, Look for the trucks. We're watching. We're listening. We might look rough. But we'll get you home. Because the highway doesn't have to be lonely. Not when 4,000 truckers refuse to drive past people in trouble." . Let this story reach more hearts.... . Ai image is for demonstration purpose only. . By Grace Jenkins

Whitwell’s annual record of 52 things he’s learned

 A list of 25 Things to Say to Your Children, including “You can do hard things. I’ve seen you do them before and you can do them again.”; “I’m proud of you.”; and “It’s so brave to feel your feelings.”


Photographing the Microscopic: Winners of Nikon Small World 2025. “Overall Winner: A rice weevil perched on a grain of rice.”


One of my favorite end-of-year lists is Tom Whitwell’s annual record of 52 things he’s learned in the past year. Some favorites of mine from the 2025 installment:

4. You can unlock the wheels on a shopping cart by playing sounds on your phone. [Joseph Gabay]

5. In the UK, water companies and offshore rigs communicate by bouncing radio waves off trails created by millions of small meteorites as they burn up in the atmosphere. [Meteor Communications Ltd]

14. Nearly 0.7% of US exports, by value, are human blood or blood products. [dynomight]

16. The Ceremonial Bugle is a small plastic device that slides into a real bugle and allows a non-musician to perform at a funeral. It has a discreet switch to select ‘Taps’, ‘Last Post’ or one of ten other calls. [Simon Britton via Nicolas Collins]

27. Researchers at MIT have developed a fibre computer that is stretchable and machine washable with 6 hours of battery life, weighing about as much as a sheet of A4 paper. [Nikhil Gupta & co]

49. Marchetti’s Constant is the idea that throughout human history, from cave dwellers to ancient Greeks to 21st century Londoners, people tend to commute for about an hour a day — 30 minutes out, 30 minutes home. So faster travel leads to longer distances, not less time. [Cesare Marchetti, plus a 2025 update]