(no subject)

Feb. 23rd, 2026 05:43 pm
shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
Good news? The storm has more or less ended and with it - my vertigo or so it appears. (I'm not tried to lie down flat as of yet, so hopefully it won't flare up when I go to bed.) So I will probably manage to navigate the mounds of snow to make it into work tomorrow. I don't really have an excuse - since I've got snow boots, and I take the subway, and it's located in the Financial District. Now, if I still worked in Jamaica and had to take the Long Island Rail Road into work that would be a different story - at last report, it was still suspended.

I'll probably make it in and not have a lot to do - because half my work place will be snowbound out on Long Island, including my boss. Although per Outlook - I think they all worked remotely. I couldn't. Vertigo was too bad. It's better now. I'm hoping it continues to improve. God, I hate vertigo.

Below is a "privileged education meme" that vaguely reminds me of a game I once played at church. If you were given certain opportunities - you advanced, if not you took two steps backwards. Myself and my friend at the time MD (who is a Black woman) were both ahead, as were a few young Black women and young men, while the old white British guy, his white Jewish wife, and the old white guys born in the 1940s were at the back. It seemed to divide itself more along class and generational lines then race?

Privileged Education Meme )


Off to find something for dinner.

Me-and-media update

Feb. 24th, 2026 12:44 pm
china_shop: An orange cartoon dog waving, with a blue-green abstract background. (Bingo!)
[personal profile] china_shop
Previous poll review
In the Fourth walls poll, 68.2% of respondents said "the one-way glass that stops TPTB seeing fannish activity" is important to them; 65.9% said "the one that shields fandom from public/media attention", and 61.4% said "the wibbly-wobby physics-defying thing that means celebs and fans exist in separate universes that just happen to occupy the same space-time". About one in five respondents love ALL the walls.

In ticky-boxes, ballooooooooons and golden sparkles won 54.5% of the vote, coming second to hugs (77.3%), but the other tickies made pretty good showings too. Thank you for your votes! ♥

Reading
I finished Courtney Milan's The Marquis Who Mustn't and enjoyed it very much. Such a kind, good-hearted series with a lovely sense of community and a spark of mischief. I'm looking forward to the next one.

Then I ploughed through one of my randomly selected library books, The Bookish Life of Nina Hill by Abbi Waxman. I found this a delightful read and very moreish. It's voicey, with a distractable, occasionally omniscient 3rd POV scattered with pop culture references. I appreciated it's acceptance of introversion and valuing of alone time. Also, the main character has anxiety, and it didn't really try to fix her.

Andrew and I are still slowly listening to Barrayar by Bujold, read by Grover Gardner.

Kdramas
Juuust enough has happened in One Spring Night that I'm into it. I mean, it's still going around in circles, but I'm most of the way through episode 14, and I'm definitely going to finish. The story relies heavily on respectability, parental authority, and conservative attitudes for its conflict (the leading man is a single dad, OH NO!!), which took me a while to get my head around.

Other TV
Our journey through Middle Earth continues. We're on the second disc of extras for The Two Towers, and the actors seem a bit punchy in their interviews, lol. Other than that, just The Pitt. ♥ (My brother watched a few episodes of The Pitt and said it doesn't have a plot, and I... don't know how to answer that. There are mini-storylines with the patients. The capital-P plot, maybe? such as it is? has kicked in at episode whatever-we're-up-to. I feel like it totally works without a driving plot arc, because there are character/relationship arcs, and rising tension/pacing, and theme. Maybe that's all you need?)

I'm amused that I have three streaming service subscriptions and we're spending so much time watching DVDs.

Audio entertainment
More Better Offline, Tech Won't Save Us (the one about humanoid robots), Writing Excuses, Letters from an American, Pod Save America, Cross Party Lines, Fansplaining.

Online life
From you I have been absent in the spring February, quite a lot. My reading page seems pretty quiet, and I'm still having trouble keeping up; open tabs proliferate (that's the middle line of a haiku).

Writing/making things
I'm subsisting on alibi sentences. My creativity is sitting on a bench somewhere, staring blankly into the sky.

I keep failing to post the meta about adverbs in speech tags because it's so prescriptive, and who am I to say anything?

Life/health/mental state things
I don't know what I'm doing with my life. The world (mostly as presented by the above podcasts) is freaking me out. Yesterday I made fifty chicken dumplings and talked to my brother in NY.

Good things
Dumplings. Creativity is a tide. Sunshine. Grapes. Library books. Black cat lying on the very edge of a sunbeam. Independent media and reporting.

Poll #34285 spam SPAM spam
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 45


How often do you check your spam folder?

View Answers

daily
4 (8.9%)

weekly
4 (8.9%)

maybe once a month?
13 (28.9%)

only when I'm looking for a specific thing
24 (53.3%)

never have I ever
1 (2.2%)

other
3 (6.7%)

ticky-box full of prescriptive writing advice
5 (11.1%)

ticky-box full of blanket cocoons and comfort food
28 (62.2%)

ticky-box full of putting clutter in boxes instead of sorting it
22 (48.9%)

ticky-box full of koalas in gum trees, chewing eucalyptus and judging us all
27 (60.0%)

ticky-box full of hugs
34 (75.6%)

TWELVE HOURS

Feb. 23rd, 2026 06:29 pm
autobotscoutriella: a green forest with the light shining through the trees (sunshine forest)
[personal profile] autobotscoutriella posting in [community profile] purimgifts
Good timezone, Purimgifters! By my math, there are a little over TWELVE HOURS left until it is no longer February 23 anywhere in the world!

If you’ve already posted, that’s fantastic! If you’ve already reached out to us about an extension or a backup, that’s also fantastic. Either way, now is an excellent time to check out our Posting Guide or our Embed Guide. For your mods’ sanity, please don’t wait until the very last minute to post! We’re happy to double-check tags, HTML, etc. for you; just send us a quick email.

If you’re not absolutely sure you’ll have your fics and art posted in the next 12 hours, you do still have a few options! Please email purim_gifts@yahoo.com ASAP if you think you need one of these.

Extension. If you’re absolutely sure you can complete your assignment, you just need another day or two, this option is for you. To request an extension, please email purim_gifts@yahoo.com!

Partial default. This option is for people who already know they can’t complete their assignment, but who want to post what they can complete. To request a partial default, please email purim_gifts@yahoo.com.

Full default. If you’re absolutely sure you can’t complete your assignment, this option is for you. You can activate it by emailing purim_gifts@yahoo.com, or by hitting the “Default” button at the AO3. Either way, you won’t be penalized for it; life happens, and we get that.

And finally, if you have questions about your options or just need a little encouragement, please email purim_gifts@yahoo.com ASAP. Don’t wait until the last minute to contact us! We’re happy to work with you, but we can’t help you if we don’t know what’s going on, and we do have to sleep at some point. Keep us in the loop and help us help you!
full_metal_ox: A gold Chinese Metal Ox zodiac charm. (Default)
[personal profile] full_metal_ox posting in [community profile] little_details
[personal profile] squidgiepdx belongs to this comm, but he’s perpetually been some combination of sick and busy, so I’ve taken the liberty of helping him out.

He’s trying to track down a particular BTS shot from Stargate: Atlantis:

And now on to the SGA Picture part of the deal. So I wrote a quickie story for [community profile] romancingmcshep about John Sheppard's ass (the fest goes until February 28th if you're interested!) and the whole story is based on a picture that NOBODY can find anymore. I KNOW! It's frustrating! Anyway, there's what I think is a "behind the scenes" shot of most likely S01E03 "Hide and Seek" or S01E05 "Suspicion" where it's focused on Joe Flanigan's butt. Like kinda blatantly. He's kneeling on the Gateroom floor over Rodney, I believe and you can see where his t-shirt is pulled up and the waistband of his BDUs are lower - showing some skin and some of his boxers. This is what I think the camera sees in that shot, as Sheppard is kneeling like that but I remember there being a whole lot more skin. Does anyone remember a BTS photo like this? SO FRUSTRATING that I can't find it when I know I've seen it a hundred times.


His post: https://squidgiepdx.dreamwidth.org/341626.html

ETA 25 February 2026: The specific shot has yet to be identified, but [personal profile] openidwouldwork has kindly provided a resource devoted to this extremely specialized topic: https://dailystargatebooty.tumblr.com/
ffutures: (Default)
[personal profile] ffutures
This is a bundle of material for Mists of Akuna, a "campaign setting of Eastern fantasy noir steampunk from Storm Bunny Studios for Dungeons & Dragons Fifth Edition." Basically, slightly apocalyptic fantasy steampunk with Ninjas and oriental monsters and magic.

https://bundleofholding.com/presents/MistsOfAkuma

  

This is another setting that doesn't interest me much - I'm not a fan of 5E and I've never really got into the oriental background much, and piling so many elements together would probably be a steep learning curve if I tried to pick it all up now. Presentation is good, with a lot of the illustrations having an anime look, and it looks like you get a lot for your money.
[syndicated profile] henryjenkins_feed

Posted by Christian Pattavina

This contribution is part of a series of posts on genre and the ‘global shuffle’.

Have you ever looked at the Wikipedia article listing “religious films”? Probably not, right? Well, if you do, you’ll notice the list feels a bit… strange. Many entries are unsurprising—Ben Hur, Himala, or Siddartha. But what is striking are the films that don’t make the cut—movies like Life of Pi (2012) or The Chronicles of Narnia (2005-2010) —especially when Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) or Monty Python’s Life of Brian (1979) do qualify.

Granted, the standard high school teacher dictum (“don’t trust Wikipedia, anyone can edit it”) still applies as always. But lists like this one aren’t alone. And more importantly, they are often useful barometers for what assumptions are commonplace. After all, when we think about what makes a movie “religious,” we probably have different ideas. Cecil DeMille’s The Ten Commandments (1956), for example, is absolutely ‘about religion’ because it’s about Moses and Aaron in Exodus—duh! But are the second and third Pirates of the Caribbean (2006, 2007) installments ‘religious’ because they are driven by themes of life and afterlife, judgment, and redemption?

Maybe the jury is still out.

As is hopefully becoming clear, part of the problem lies in the semantic slide between saying “religious” and “about religion.” The former typically describes a devotional disposition, while the latter makes a claim about content. But there’s a larger problem at stake. Typically, sets of iconographies, themes, and even ideologies constitute distinct genres that announce themselves quite readily. Gunslinging in ramshackle frontier towns lets us know we’re watching a Western, as in The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly (1966); capes and underwear worn on the outside of tights let us know a superhero will save the day, seen in Superman (2025).

The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly (1966)

Superman (2025)

But what cues tell us that religion matters in a film? Monks chanting in a mountaintop monastery? An enchanting adhan calling Muslims to prayer? A hushed Bible study? Across traditions, the “religious film” lacks stable conventions or images that travel cleanly from one context to another.

This absence reflects a problem of category that scholars of religion have been wrestling with for decades: “religion” is not a timeless or neutral category. Influential scholars like Talal Asad have argued that the modern idea of religion emerged to suit the needs of secular governance, in ways that quietly privilege Christianity while sidelining other forms of devotion. Those downstream of him argue that the “global religions” paradigm arose with the turn of the 20th century—but, the resulting rubric boxes other traditions into a near-image of Protestant Christianity.

When examined through the lens of genre, the “religious film” inherits this instability of category, too. Film scholar Rick Altman famously argues that genres do not ‘live’ inside of films; they’re negotiated between producers and consumers. Filmmakers and studios, and audiences and critics, continuously co-produce, maintain, hybridize, and transform genres. Genres persist because people agree—often implicitly—on what to expect from them, and when to reward familiarity or embrace deviation.

Framing genre as a negotiation helps bridge the fuzziness of parsing ‘religious’ from ‘about religion,’ by providing a vocabulary of intent, expectation, and effect. However, it does not clarify the terms of negotiation when we mark a film as “religious.” Is the negotiation in question about subject matter, like gods and scriptures? Or perhaps whether it centers metaphysical questions on suffering and salvation?

Let’s think about the consumers’ end of the equation. One rather Protestant way of slicing things starts with the question “What do viewers pay to feel when they buy a ticket to a film we might call ‘religious’?” Altman helps us phrase things more neutrally: What do viewers expect as norms, and what deviations from those expectations give them pleasure, within a genre economy?

The passion of the christ (2004) poster

Take The Passion of the Christ (2004), which reigned for two decades as the highest-grossing R-rated film of all time. Headlines from its release remind us that viewers left theaters in tears. Reportedly, one viewer suffered a fatal heart attack from shock upon witnessing its depictions of extreme violence. Observers described audiences leaving the film as resembling a funeral procession or wake. Many of these affected patrons had paid to witness what they believed was an unflinchingly accurate representation of Christ’s suffering for humanity and its sins. In a phrase, they paid for a “religious experience,” or perhaps a “devotional encounter.”

Glenn Peck show

These days, biblical epics like The Passion of the Christ (2004)—which participates in a pre-cinematic tradition of “passion plays” that dramatize Jesus’ final days—often circulate in a market outside of mainstream film production. Independent films in its wake dominate the Christian cinematic marketplace. Nefarious (2023), for example, is a modern morality play about a psychiatrist tasked with evaluating the sanity of a man on death row claiming to be possessed by a demon.

In the final act, the killer—host to a very real demon—is executed. The demon then possesses the psychiatrist, whom it forces to steal a gun from a prison officer in order to kill himself. The psychiatrist, a steadfast atheist, spontaneously asks God to intercede, and the pistol misfires. One year later, the psychiatrist appears on Glenn Beck’s show, now agnostic and “open” to Christianity. The message is unmistakable: secular skepticism collapses in face of the divine.

Nefarious (2023) clearly represents an attempt to create a religiously palatable alternative for conservative Christian audiences to tried-and-true secular entertainment (especially for those who believe the world is ending soon). Liberal values like ending racism, gender inequality, and homophobia are played for laughs—including those of the incredulous demon. And ten times in the film does the demon sneeringly allude to Jesus Christ as “the carpenter” without naming him—an invitation to Christian viewers to pat themselves on the back for successfully identifying the referent. Nefarious (2023) instrumentalizes the psychological horror/thriller genres as a vehicle for depicting the satisfying moral breakdown of a smug secular liberal skeptic; only can an encounter with the divine make him a ‘potential’ believer (and we, the knowing audience, sense he has already been persuaded).

So-called “faith-based” films companies doubtless fall under the umbrella of religious movies. But they are hardly alone. Heretic (2024), another independent psychological horror film with a one-word title, incorporates skepticism toward organized religion into the core of its drama.

Heretic (2024)

Heretic (2024) makes the cut for the Wikipedia list even though Nefarious (2023) does not. Now, part of why it earns this dubious honor certainly has to do with the fact that Heretic (2024) stars Hugh Grant, and earned 10 times the cash in box office sales. But the distinction is still revealing, because the religious elements on display in Heretic (2024) are not genre markers.

The camera’s lingering on weighty scripture tomes—and the main characters’ exchanges quoting snippets from them—reveal precious little about what the audience might expect to ‘feel’ while watching. That responsibility is reserved for hallmarks of psychological horror and thriller: claustrophobic spaces, dark corridors, blocked entrances, uneven power dynamics and a loss of control, close-up camera shots, and the like.

What the religious framing does do here is refract these familiar elements through a certain prism of moral anxiety, to accent and heighten their affect. Grant’s Mr. Reed interrogates the missionaries about their doctrine and manufactures “tests of faith.” While these elements do not constitute a genre framework in their own right (unless “satire about atheist who won’t shut up” counts), they amplify and inflect the terror and thrill.

Physical jeopardy becomes cosmic as faith falls under siege; and the audience fears not just ‘traditional’ bodily harm, but a powerful disorientation that occurs when characters’ access to what they revere is interrupted or weaponized against them. That is, unless you, too, are an atheist who won’t shut up.

Contrasting Heretic (2024) and Nefarious (2023) —two independent films of the same genre that center religious themes from similar traditions—exposes a fault-line in seeing “the religious” as a cinematic genre. But at the same time, the plasticity that makes it falter as a genre helps it thrive as a higher-order concept: a mode. A mode here describes a portable set of attitudes and tonal registers that can refract across more precise or elaborate genre traditions. It overlays the structure of a genre with a distinct affective palate, deepening the stakes and coloring, but not dictating, narrative form.

Turning to global cinema deepens the genre fault line, but is persuasive for the case of the mode. The Iranian neo-noir movie Holy Spider (2022) provides an especially compelling case study. Based on true events from the turn of the millennium, the film follows a fictional journalist investigating a string of brutal murders of prostitutes in the holy city of Mashhad, Iran, whose cases are not treated seriously by local authorities. For our purposes, Holy Spider (2022) is instructive precisely because it mobilizes the religious not as a generic foundation, but as a moral and affective mode that animates socio-political landscapes, reconfiguring otherwise ‘secular’ genre conventions.

The film’s noir scaffolding—its unfolding mystery, its muted color palate, its lingering focus on urban decay, its victims’ anti-sensational deaths, and the ethical ambiguity of institutions typically vested with social safety, order, and uplift—provides a backdrop against which to raise questions of devotion, sin, and justice. Film noir’s characteristic concern with moral decay becomes, in Holy Spider, inseparable from the spiritual corruption of a community that conflates piety with religiously sanctioned violence.

Saeed Hanaei, whose string of murders inspired the film, acquired the sobriquet “Spider Killer” because he lured women back to his apartment before strangling them to death, as a spider lures its insect victims to its web.  The “holy” in the film’s name comes from Saeed’s self-appointed mission of moral cleansing. When reporter Arezoo Rahimi stages a sting and exposes him—doing the work the police won’t—Saeed receives widespread support for his violent murders; the city becomes engulfed in a discourse dehumanizing the women who are sex workers, for religious impropriety.

The religious social fabric of Mashhad makes possible a compelling variation on the typical noir formula. Saeed embarks on a personal crusade to root out corruption and moral deficit; when he is found out, he is rewarded and his sentiments are echoed. And yet, the figure responsible for injecting the language of corruption into collective debate is among the primary upholders of a deep-rooted spiritual corruption that manifests as repression and violence against women.

Personal social experiences of corruption and immobility motivate countless noir antagonists, but in Holy Spider (2022) they take on an extra dimension. Saeed reframes his private anger as divine duty, displacing responsibility onto God as he targets sex workers—and not the social forces that weigh upon them both, nor the men who create demand for their services—as causes of moral decay. Such is the heart of the noir: fighting against rotting social institutions is fruitless and disillusioning, especially in a society willing to quietly excuse heinous violence when it reinforces patriarchal control.

The film evidently submits a sustained indictment of unquestioned male social hegemony (or in a word, patriarchy). One of the most powerful ways in which it does so is by establishing parallels between how Saeed interacts with his children and how he interacts with his victims. When he is about to drive off with either of his children, and particularly his daughter, he takes care to warn them to “hold on tight” on the back of his moped.

When he first persuades each of his victims to come home with him, he gives them the exact same warning: “hold on tight.” A tender expression of paternal concern is twisted into a pretension disguising imminent violence and control. So morally corrupted is the city of Mashhad that a father elides his protective responsibilities with his self-appointed violent duty of religious purification.

Holy Spider (2022)

Holy Spider (2022)

The same man who kills women in the name of virtue exerts tyrannical control over his family, especially the women in it, under the guide of fatherhood and righteousness. Although he believes he is protecting his family by ridding Mashhad of the ‘undesirables’ who bring or signal corruption, in actuality he replicates the same violence and objectification across each context. Nowhere is this clearer than the very final scene of the film, in which Saeed’s son proudly replicates what he thinks his father did to the women he murdered, and he does so by bossing around his younger sister. The religious mode here inflects and intensifies the noir film’s usual logic of cyclical corruption by transforming this warning of continued violence into a ritualized reproduction of patriarchal violence.

If a film channeling the religious mode in the way of The Passion of the Christ (2004) could be said to invite spectators to participate in a devotional encounter, Holy Spider (2022) instead stages a crisis of devotion. Elements that register as religious are mobilized not to stir positive religious fervor, but to elucidate the consequences of suffusing a social fabric with its logics in the first place. In a system where women’s worth is tied to their modesty and obedience, violence against “unworthy” or “impure” women is not just tolerated—it can be justified morally.

Understanding “religion” as a mode rather than a genre in film production helps keep track of its transgeneric and transnational passports. Much like the melodrama, which represents a distinct affective and ideological structure, the religious mode names an orientation that organizes feeling around moral legibility, transgression, and redemption; and, it does so with an eye toward the way dichotomies between the sacred and the profane pervade the everyday.

As a mode, it does not merely represent belief but formalizes the tension between transcendence and immanence, faith and doubt, devotion and desecration. Like the scholarly word “religious” itself, isolating “religious films” as a genre distinct from other generic categories misses the point of channeling that mode of communicating via screen. Much as one cannot simply isolate religion from cultural complexes, neither can religious films be treated solely as performing “religion” qua genre. Take another look at the Wikipedia list. How many of those movies are ‘just’ doing something religious? What is religion helping the film accomplish?

Biography

Christian Pattavina is a doctoral student at USC, where he researches religion, media, and American politics.

Chat corner, low on fluff

Feb. 23rd, 2026 08:22 pm
annathecrow: screenshot from Star Wars: The Phantom Menace. A detail of the racing pod engines. (sw: pods)
[personal profile] annathecrow posting in [community profile] dreamwars

Hi,

this is the weekly chat corner here on Dreamwars. How are you? Anything Star Wars-y to talk about?

~ ~ ~

I've had the kitten on my lap when I started to write this, but she's abandoned me in favor of food, boo. So I'm thinking about GFFA pets. Is it just me, or is it really a bit weird how many SW critters are so... lizard-y? Everything is space dinosaurs, lol. I guess tookas are fluffy...unless it's in TCW, where the animation really makes them look more like frogs to me.

What GFFA animal would you want as a pet?

Forewords and Afterwords

Feb. 23rd, 2026 01:06 pm
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
[personal profile] marycatelli posting in [community profile] book_love
Forewords and Afterwords by W.H. Auden

A collection of essays, including reviews, all written on occasion, for a particular book.

It produces a great variety of subjects.

Some are of period interest, of various kinds. The appropriate treatment for migraines being psychoanalysis? On the other hand, this is where I read his observation about how going over to Rome was a shocking scandal in the upper classes -- like the birth of an illegitimate baby -- but something that did happen, whereas becoming a Baptist was inconceivable.

Much about poets and other writers, some interesting observations on heroes, and more.
shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
So the snowstorm was/is Bomb Cyclone - which I learned ages ago from an allergist -will play havoc on anyone with sinus issues.

A bomb cyclone according to the National Weather Service is : "or the meteorological term "bombogenesis," refers to the central pressure of a low-pressure system dropping at least 24 millibars within 24 hours.

Most bomb cyclones happen off the East Coast, which typically sees about one of these intense storms each year. In the Northeast, they form when there’s a sharp temperature contrast usually between a cold continental air mass meeting the warmer waters of the Atlantic Ocean.

This temperature difference, combined with a strong jet-stream disturbance that forces air upward, sets the stage for bombogenesis. Many nor’easters actually fall into this category, as cold air from Canada collides with the warm Gulf Stream, creating a perfect recipe for explosive storm growth."

The reason it plays havoc on sinus issues - is the barometric pressure drops. The fluid in the head shifts - placing pressure on the inner ear, resulting in vertigo.

It gave me non-stop vertigo, which I've been battling with prescription Dramamine to combat dizziness and nausea. It's kind of like seasickness, if you've never experienced it? But on land.

I went to bed, lay down, the room began to spin, frak that, I slept sitting up. As long as I was upright, not moving my head too much, I was fine. I'm hoping it is gone by tonight. It should be - since I think it is storm related.

Oh well, it could be worse - I could be homeless with vertigo, or stuck in an airport or bus depot with it, and no pills to take for it. (They work just not as well as I'd like? Work better when it is mild and well, we aren't in the middle of a bomb cyclone, and I didn't have a cold the previous week. But they did keep the nausea and vomiting at bay.)

The storm is still going by the way. It's been going since roughly 10 pm last night. Although it's no longer a blizzard.

Currently or as of 10 a.m. Monday (it's about 11:42 AM now and yes still snowing):https://www.nbcnewyork.com/weather/weather-stories/how-much-snow-totals-inches-nyc-long-island-nj-accumulation-blizzard/6467598/




It's shut NYC down almost completely. The Mayor was smart though - he cancelled all schools, declared a travel ban, and the Governor informed government agencies to keep all non-essential employees home, for remote work, if possible. They have a Full Snow Day for the first time in years (no remote), public transportation has shut down in places, and the travel ban was extended to about 6pm. It's 31 F, and feels like 6 F.

Transit Adjustments )

https://ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/news/2026/02/23/what-s-open-closed-nyc-snow-storm-feb-2026

[ETA: The travel ban in NYC has been lifted, but with the caveat that people should drive slowly and with caution.]

"As of 10 a.m. Sunday, Feb. 22, more than 11,200 flights in and out of the U.S. were canceled or delayed.

In the New York City area, disruptions were widespread. At John F. Kennedy International Airport, 42% of departing flights were canceled, along with 7% delayed. Incoming flights were hit even harder, with 63% canceled and 2% delayed."

- https://www.lohud.com/story/weather/2026/02/22/nyc-airports-hit-by-massive-cancellations-ahead-of-blizzard-see-live-flight-status/88762935007/

Vertigo hasn't gone, unfortunately, but the medication has helped a bit.

So how's your day going so far?

Wu Xie's Private Notes

Feb. 23rd, 2026 05:27 pm
profiterole_reads: (Nobuta wo Produce - Shuji to Akira)
[personal profile] profiterole_reads
The c-drama Wu Xie's Private Notes (aka Time Raiders) was so much fun! It's a new adaptation of the first arc of the Lost Tomb/DMBJ franchise, which I hadn't watched before, so the story was new to me.

We see how Wu Xie, Xiaoge and Pangzi first met, and Wu Xie's Third Uncle is present in the first half of the story, before his mysterious disappearance.

Casting-wise, this new Wu Xie was introduced in the flashbacks of Tibetan Sea Flower.

You can watch it legally and for free on YouTube.

challenge closed ⌛

Feb. 23rd, 2026 06:31 am
luminousdaze: Sisu from Raya and the Last Dragon [by magicrubbish] (disney animation 10)
[personal profile] luminousdaze posting in [community profile] screen_icons

Round 31 is now closed. I will post the voting by tomorrow and a new challenge in the future.

Stars Thank You GIF by BrittDoesDesign - on GIPHY
queenslayerbee: painting of a hand sprouting leaves from its fingertips, blurred. (fairy (all about eve[s]))
[personal profile] queenslayerbee
Picture of a paperback edition of And the Age of Summer Will Rise, by Camilla Andrew. Over a rich purple background, the edges are decorated with golden, pink and lilac flowers, feathers and leaves, framing the central picture. It shows Laila and Darius, the two central character, facing each other in an embrace. She's of golden brown skin and blonde curly hair, wearing a golden gown, and he's of black skin, long hair and sharp features, with pointy ears, with a golden rope coming from her dress around his waist. Behind them, there's a thunderous purple sky. Beneath them, two pink flaming phoenixes bracket the author's name.

My review of And the Summer Will Rise, the third and final installment of The Essence of the Equinox trilogy, can also be read here!

This review might contain very mild spoilers

It’s been a pleasure to follow this series during the last few years, from its first installment, its sequel, its prequel, its additional short stories, and now its more than worthy conclusion (at least, for now). 

And the Age of Summer Will Rise gave me everything I could’ve dared to ask of this series. It followed the threads the author had so carefully weaved from the start, allowing for an ending that feels earned, bittersweet yet full of possibility. 

The doomed romance between the two leads, Laila and Darius, our star princess and the monstrous king she fell irremediably in love with, was always a highlight of the series, but it’s in this book where it all pays off in a masterfully singular way that stands in defiance of more typical approaches in the genre. I thought the decay of their relationship and the toll it took on Laila was done with the utmost skill and empathy; following our heroine’s emotional roller-coaster of a journey was harrowing and ultimately rewarding, like a balm for every other time I’ve seen a female character I love having her arc discarded in favour of a contrived, effortless resolution. 

Another aspect that always stood out in TEOTE and that was not at all lost was its female characters, both due to their quantity and extensive variety, and due to their significance and their reach in the narrative. They’re important players, each in their own way and to their own extent, with gravitas and with the power to shape the story, and no mere ornaments moved through it at convenience. I must make a especial mention here to Sabina, a character whose journey in the last two books has left me aching, but extremely gratified. 

The author, as usual, ties these and other elements together with a beautiful lush prose, an admirable eye for detail, and a talent to entice all five senses with her description, rich with symbolism yet without ever losing sight of the plot and utilising her style to its full effect. All enhanced by the beautiful cover and interior art by Eeva Nikunen. 

I encourage anyone with a love for high fantasy stories with intricate world building and complex relationships of all kinds, as well as with a craving similar to my own for female characters written with nuance, empathy, respect and courage, to pick up the first book of the trilogy (with a review that you can see here). 

This is a series that gave me so much I’d been missing in other fantasy worlds, and I know I’ll still revisit years after this. Just as I look forward to seeing what Camilla Andrew dazzles us next with. 


harlow_turner_chaotic_ace: (Herald Editor)
[personal profile] harlow_turner_chaotic_ace posting in [community profile] su_herald
SPIKE: 'Made with care for Randy.' (looks at Giles angrily) Randy Giles? Why not just call me 'Horny Giles,' or 'Desperate for a Shag Giles'? I knew there was a reason I hated you!
GILES: Randy's ... a family name, undoubtedly.

~~S6E8: Tabula Rasa~~




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The Jewish War: Second half of Book 1

Feb. 22nd, 2026 07:06 pm
cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
Last week: Some really interesting discussions on (among other things) Caesar Augustus, the temple in Egypt, and the destruction of the temple (in Jerusalem) as divine punishment and also free will.

This week: More Herod! Definitely went quite a bit faster than last week! Featuring lots and lots of family drama... the kind that includes a ton of bloodshed. I'll talk more about it in comments.

Next week: [personal profile] selenak can you give us a halfway point for Book 2? It looks a bit shorter but I'm also going to be crunched for time next week (and definitely won't be able to post until Sunday) so half a book is what it's going to have to be! ETA: Death of Emperor Claudius!

Falling.

Feb. 22nd, 2026 08:42 pm
hannah: (Winter - obsessiveicons)
[personal profile] hannah
The travel ban's up. Schools are going back to remote learning. Nobody's going anywhere if they can help it. I'd figured this was coming, and it's nice that it's settling in. The snow's coming down steadily and I can faintly hear human voices - going from where the light's coming from, the people in the next building over are either hosting some friends or having a very loud party by themselves. Either way, it's warm human voices on a cold night.

Not a dark night, though. The clouds aren't letting that happen. It's one of the nicer parts of nighttime snow.

Snow-cane or Snow Armageddon 2026

Feb. 22nd, 2026 06:35 pm
shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
Crazy Org is prepping for the snow armageddon or snow-hurricane that is set to hit us around midnight tonight. My sinuses and head can feel it coming - I've been struggling with a sick sinus headache all day long, along with vertigo - the only thing keeping it at bay are medications. (antihistimine for vertigo, decongestant (that you can take if you have high blood pressure), and migraine meds.). So far it's kind of working. I did fall asleep while watching All Creatures Great and Small on PBS Passport around 2pm. ( I decided to donate to PBS - and got access to the app again, at least for the year. If you donate more than $60, you can use the PBS Passport app.)

The Mayor issued a "travel ban" effective at 9pm today (Sunday) and the Long Island Rail Road suspended service, and Crazy Org (major public transportation agency) has advised its non-essential office workers - that you can tele-work from home if you are set up for it or in the program. (I'm not in the program (union) nor am I certain I have the set up any longer - since they've changed the security protocols again - but I've already chosen to take a personal day or vacation day - since the vertigo is hovering in the background and will be an issue. I have enough left that it won't be an issue.)
Read more... )


I've been binge-watching All Creatures Great and Small - S6, napping, and fending off a vertigo headache for most of the day. I did go to the grocery store around 1 pm (before the storm really hit - and it was just drizzling) to pick up olive oil, coconut oil, honey, Mrs Dash seasoning, toilet paper, chocolate, and recycling bags and trash bags.
Also spoke to mother. Apparently it's raining in Ohau, Hawaii, and almost spring in Montana (according to my niece) , which has received hardly any snow, the plants are springing to life, and the temperatures are in the fifties and sixties. It's also in the 60s in Hilton Head, SC. Sounds lovely. I want to be there. It's 31 F here and rapidly dropping, and snowing.

Now, have decided to try cubicle mate rec'd "Start-Up". [ETA: tried, gave up (I found the guy tied to the chair with barbed wire a bit much) and the woman wanting to do a crypto start up annoying - plus I am not an Adam Brody fan). Went back to watch Angel S5.]

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