tomorrow's march

Jan. 22nd, 2026 08:59 am[personal profile] mellowtigger
mellowtigger: (liberal frustration)

I assumed the protest was happening at the People's Plaza, but it's actually happening at Commons Park, across from the football stadium. This page has details:
https://www.facebook.com/events/s/ice-out-of-minnesota-day-of-tr/1772691910085908/

It will be bitterly cold, but Minnesotan's know how to dress for it. I plan to be there. If you're local, then I hope you can join too. It's important to note that the state AFL-CIO has now endorsed this day of action. I updated yesterday's post to mention it, plus a few more links.

We live in historic times. This Republican administration is trying to set a terrible precedent, starting here in Minneapolis.

catness: (playful)
Snowflake Challenge: A warmly light quaint street of shops at night with heavy snow falling.

Challenge #11
In your own space, grant someone's wish from Challenge #5.


Ah, a creative way to increase user engagement ;) I did post a few comments with various recs the last time. This time I've invested some effort into it and made several snooker icons for [personal profile] zimena. It feels a little like cheating - normally it's very hard for me to make icons for fandoms I don't associate with. But [personal profile] zimena is my friend, and I've heard a lot from her about her snooker heroes, so the subject is at least somewhat familiar :) And adding Chinese text was very educational for me ;)

So, Letterboxd...

Jan. 22nd, 2026 11:29 am[personal profile] loganberrybunny
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
Public

I am marginally impressed, but no better than that. I'd say it's about what I expected, but not as good as I'd been hoping. Thoughts:

Pros: It's quite nicely laid out, and it's easy to use and to read other people's reviews. I quite like being able to keep a kind of diary of what I've watched when. Its search feature is surprisingly well thought out. Since I've already posted my reviews on here, it's very little effort to crosspost to there. I can also link to those posts without linking to this DW with all its non-film fluff. I'm continuing to use Letterboxd for these reasons.

On the downside, the community features are pretty minimal: the commenting on reviews is clunky and ultra-basic (reply notifications only sometimes work at all) and there seems little reason to follow someone you don't already know. It doesn't feel much like, well, a community. I don't really like sites you have to use for literal years before getting any real interaction at all. And which idiot decided not to let you filter reviews by language? There are some English-language films where at least half the reviews are in Spanish or Italian or whatever.

Oh, and even if you pay for Pro, which allows custom posters, you still can't display UK-standard quad posters sensibly. (40x30 inches, landscape format – the ones I use on most film posts here.) The usual Internet US-centricism. So I won't pay.

Anyway, should anyone want to see what I post over there, which is basically what I paste here with a slicker look but less interaction, here's my Letterboxd profile.
sonia: Quilted wall-hanging (Default)
There is a general strike called for Friday January 23 in Minnesota. Stay home from work if it feels right, and definitely don't cross any picket lines, including the electronic ones of shopping at big corporations like Amazon, etc. (if you can avoid it).

From my union:
"This is a verified page fundraising support for the Minneapolis Regional Labor Federation, AFL-CIO and Working Partnerships' 2026 rapid response effort to meet the needs of impacted union members, worker center members, and their families..."
https://workingpartnerships.betterworld.org/campaigns/support-impacted-union-families

Here is how you can help:

Posts by [personal profile] naomikritzer

How to help if you are outside Minnesota.

She covers a variety of topics, including how to start preparing for if and when this shit comes to your home state, and the suggestion to talk About immigration, and make it clear you think it’s GOOD.

If you are in Minnesota.
ysabetwordsmith: Text says New Year Resolutions on notebook (resolutions)
HOW TO RESTART WHEN YOU’VE FALLEN OFF YOUR GOALS

If you’ve fallen off your goals, welcome to being a real person.

It happens to everyone, including the women who look like they have it all together. The difference is not that they “never fall off.” The difference is that they restart faster.

conuly: (Default)
Ms. Marcus says that an occasional poem is a poem
written about something
important
or special
that's gonna happen
or already did.
Think of a specific occasion, she says—and write about it.

Like what?! Lamont asks.
He's all slouched down in his seat.
I don't feel like writing about no occasion.

How about your birthday?
Ms. Marcus says.
What about it? Just a birthday. Comes in June and it ain't
June, Lamont says. As a matter of fact,

he says, it's January and it's snowing.
Then his voice gets real low and he says
And when it's January and all cold like this
feels like June's a long, long ways away.


The whole class looks at Ms. Marcus.
Some of the kids are nodding.
Outside the sky looks like it's made out of metal
and the cold, cold air is rattling the windowpanes
and coming underneath them too.

I seen Lamont's coat.
It's gray and the sleeves are too short.
It's down but it looks like a lot of the feathers fell out
a long time ago.
Ms. Marcus got a nice coat.
It's down too but real puffy so
maybe when she's inside it
she can't even tell January from June.

Then write about January, Ms. Marcus says, that's
an occasion.

But she looks a little bit sad when she says it
Like she's sorry she ever brought the whole
occasional poem thing up.

I was gonna write about Mama's funeral
but Lamont and Ms. Marcus going back and forth
zapped all the ideas from my head.

I guess them arguing
on a Tuesday in January's an occasion
So I guess this is an occasional poem.

*************


Link
conuly: (Default)
No real symptoms, but I'm a little stuffy and super sleepy.

******************************


Read more... )
sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey: passion)
In the midst of everything, we still have birthdays, and for [personal profile] spatch's fifty-first I took him to Porter Square Books and on the roundabout way home we collected dinner from Il Casale. It started to snow on the way back, the light salting flakes of an all-day deep-freeze. I have my fingers crossed for an Arctic explosion this weekend.



I have written another fill (AO3) for [community profile] threesentenceficathon. WERS played Dave Herlihy's "Good Trouble" (2025) and I had to get home to trace his voice to Boston's own post-punk O Positive. I wish I could call the hundred-year tides against the people who have no right to the streets of my grandparents' city. Failing that, it still matters to be alive.
tinkaton: allenby beardsley | g gundam (♥︎ mecha)
A couple fannish year-end memes! Pretend it isn't almost a month past.

2025 Fandom Year In Review )


2025 Fanfic Year in Review )

disheveled

Jan. 22nd, 2026 12:00 am[syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 22, 2026 is:

disheveled • \dih-SHEV-uld\  • adjective

A disheveled person or thing is not neat or tidy.

// His wrinkled suit gave him a disheveled appearance.

See the entry >

Examples:

“My mother is waking up. ... She dresses quickly. Her oblong, Scots-Irish face may be too idiosyncratic for the screen anyway, the hollow cheekbones and sharp eyes, the straw-blond hair worn in a low-slung and slightly disheveled beehive.” — Matthew Specktor, The Golden Hour: A Story of Family and Power in Hollywood, 2025

Did you know?

These days, the adjective disheveled is used to describe almost anything or anyone marked by disorder or disarray. Rumpled clothes, for example, often contribute to a disheveled appearance, as in Colson Whitehead’s novel Crook Manifesto, when the comedian Roscoe Pope walks onstage “disheveled, in wrinkled green corduroy pants.” Apartments, desks, bedsheets, you name it—all can be disheveled when not at their neatest and tidiest. Hair, however, is the most common noun to which disheveled is applied (along with hairdo terms like bun and beard), a fact that makes etymological sense. Disheveled comes from the Middle English adjective discheveled, meaning “bareheaded” or “with disordered hair.” That word is a partial translation of the Anglo-French word deschevelé, a combination of the prefix des- (“dis-“) and chevoil, meaning “hair.”



it's a lot

Jan. 21st, 2026 10:07 pm[personal profile] mellowtigger
mellowtigger: (peace)

It's all a lot. Despite today's heartbreaking photo (and related local news story) making the rounds online (no, not that that other awful photo), and despite this physician news conference protesting current federal actions, I feel like the national news cycle is trying to move on to other shiny things, avoiding any need to say what's clearly evident in this situation.

As the ongoing occupation by over 3,000 ICE agents stretches into its third week — with no clear end in sight — I’ve received a steady string of messages from increasingly concerned friends across the country. They all start the same way: Uh… is this really as bad as it looks from the outside? My answer to that question is easy: no, it’s worse.
- How much can a city take?" (The Verge)

There aren't many things that get world religions to agree, but this event does. Dozens of faith leaders representing religions both major and minor in Minnesota held this joint statement yesterday. Their event during the general strike is apparently being organized by ISAIAH, but I couldn't find a page specifically about it on their website. Despite the forecast of bitterly cold temperatures (-27C/-17F to -22C/-8F) on Friday, I intend to be there in downtown Minneapolis for the 2pm march. This general strike is now endorsed by the state AFL-CIO!

There are, however, good bits of journalism. I recommend the following:

I queued that last link to the bit where the historian specifically talks about Minnesota and why we were a bad choice by Trump to start this escalation. We haven't given him (and the rest of you in the USA) the invocation of the Insurrection Act. I've said repeatedly on this blog over the years that Minnesota has a different kind of conservative politics, still aware of community responsibility. (I did, however, give up that estimation of them in this post last year, when they tried to literally steal a majority voice in the state government.) This historian mentions that civic mindedness specifically and how it relates to our current situation. That whole YouTube video is worthwhile. It's an hour well spent, from past world history to a conclusion with hope about the future. I need to learn more about these "ad hoc committees" as they relate to the new world order of "diplomatic variable geometries". It sounds initially like the demarchy that I keep advocating. I'm not sure, though, if that's what they mean by those new terms.

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