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Dead Duck Day marks the fateful 1995 crash of a male mallard duck into the Rotterdam Museum of Natural History's glass facade, which was subsequently followed by 75 minutes of homosexual necrophilia - the first scientifically documented case of its kind, earning researcher Kees Moeliker an Ig Nobel Prize. And worldwide fame and virality.
Ever since, the day has been celebrated/commemorated each year on June 4, 4:55 pm, by Kees in front of the window of the Rotterdam museum where the duck met its end. I've been to a couple of editions and I didn't want to miss this one! Especially because Dead Duck Day is now going to travel around the world, because Kees has retired. I hopped on my bike and got there just in time. I didn't get him to pose with me for you guys (I didn't wear a Mltshp shirt anyways), but I did get to talk to Marc Abrahams from the Ig Noble Prize who was there as well. He's super nice.
If you know of a place, bar, museum or other kind of venue where Dead Duck Day should be held next time, let Kees know. Seriously, by the way. Or give me a shout and I'll pass it on.
https://www.hetnatuurhistorisch.nl/bezoek...
Ever since, the day has been celebrated/commemorated each year on June 4, 4:55 pm, by Kees in front of the window of the Rotterdam museum where the duck met its end. I've been to a couple of editions and I didn't want to miss this one! Especially because Dead Duck Day is now going to travel around the world, because Kees has retired. I hopped on my bike and got there just in time. I didn't get him to pose with me for you guys (I didn't wear a Mltshp shirt anyways), but I did get to talk to Marc Abrahams from the Ig Noble Prize who was there as well. He's super nice.
If you know of a place, bar, museum or other kind of venue where Dead Duck Day should be held next time, let Kees know. Seriously, by the way. Or give me a shout and I'll pass it on.
https://www.hetnatuurhistorisch.nl/bezoek...
otaman
Science!
another drake mallard?
Wow. I love the diversity of our world!
@O_C no thank you, i'm full
I love culture!
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Two photographs, the top one features the outside wall of a building, with a half finished mural, with a painting of flowers and insects. The bottom picture shows two people working on the mural with brushes in hand.
I've been hard at work in the last two weeks together with my colleague Ivonne (in the background). But we've been slowed down a little bit. Last week there was a heatwave of more than 30°C and this weekend it's been raining a lot. But we've got some extra time. So I'm not too worried. We're not nearly finished, although some people might think it is done :-)
By the way, the design is basically a watercolour I did a couple of years ago, with some minor alterations: https://mltshp.com/p/1N5L6
The official opening is on Saturday afternoon June the 13th. If you're in the neighbourhood of Rotterdam, drop by!
#art #painting
By the way, the design is basically a watercolour I did a couple of years ago, with some minor alterations: https://mltshp.com/p/1N5L6
The official opening is on Saturday afternoon June the 13th. If you're in the neighbourhood of Rotterdam, drop by!
#art #painting
whoaaaaaaaa nice work!
it's amazing to see how your linework translates so beautifully to such a large scale!
it's amazing to see how your linework translates so beautifully to such a large scale!
@nikkuneko Thank you! Yes, the line work is kind of the same as in my small drawings. I was quite confident I could enlarge this because my lines are kind of an extension of my anatomy (or at least that's what it feels like to me). But it was a nice surprise to see it worked out as well as I hoped it would!
Yesssssssss
Can't like this enough - so awesome!
Amazing :)
I wasn’t sure how easily your style would translate to such a large scale but it looks fantastic! Oh this is wonderful. Please keep the updates coming!
YAY!
Oh it's gorgeous!!
Woohooooo!!!
LoveitLoveitLoveitLoveit
Dang this is fantastic! Thanks so much for the update!
This looks amazing, i love that style as a mural
Holy shit, that bee.
Honestly, this is so exciting to see! Thanks for the update.
gorgeous!
This is incredible.
whooooo!
This is wonderful.
Amazing!
Thanks to everybody who commented! I can't tag you all!
Spectacular!!! Just brilliant.
Congratulations and it's not even finished!
Thank you for posting.
Congratulations and it's not even finished!
Thank you for posting.
Enjoying this already!
So cool!
Very cool!
Oh! Now I need a bigger phone! ❤️
So much rain recently. Hopefully that will be over soon
Really cheerful! The neighborhood just got a major upgrade
@joost Yes! The plan was for it to be done by now. But first, we could only work half days because of the heatwave and now the rain is making it problematic. I'm going to start tomorrow morning at 6 or something to make the most of the little dry days left the coming week.
Wonderful progress! And it's worth adding: AI could never
Lovely :)
Wow!
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It's been a while since I've had a banana split. I should fix that.
I thought about that very dessert yesterday, when gazing at a post here.
Great photo
Are those sprinkles AND jimmies?
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A black-and-white pen-and-ink drawing shows a young bull sitting calmly in the shade under a cork tree at the top of a hill as he watches two other young bulls in the field below butt their heads together.
I had read this book to my children at bedtimes over 1000x. The illustrations, inkwork and high contrast never got old.
Gift Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2026...
Gift Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2026...
Didya know there was a song?
https://mltshp.com/p/1RR3O
https://mltshp.com/p/1RR3O
Someone I knew went to school with the son of the guy who wrote this book.
I still have my tattered childhood copy, it was a library discard when I got it. The drawings of the Spanish ladies and the picadors are divine.
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A blue lit room with a shower at the end, a bench, a shelf and a door to a closet like space.
Since Backrooms is out there, I thought I'd share this. I go into sensory deprivation for ninety minutes every other week or so.
Over the years, I've done it about 150 times. Last week I did my last annual double float, which is 3.5 hours (right after COVID it was five hours). It's my last annual, because I intend to do it every other month going forward.
This is room 4 in Float On in Southeast Portland Oregon. It helped me keep my job much longer than I would have otherwise. It's guided my greater decisions . It's allowed me to revisit memories I didn't know I had
The door to the right is like a closet with the floor covered with water with so much salt in it that I can float with my face above the water. It's warm enough that I quickly forget what is water and what is my skin and the warm air around it. It's dark and silent.
Just walking into the room, just getting the reminder email, removes everything from my head and the tension in my shoulders melts.
When I get in and turn off the light, visions start almost immediately. Today it was a massive eye with a dark green iris. Sometimes, once I see something, words come to me. They nearly never relate to the image. The last hundred or so floats, I've tried to remember at least three of these. When the float is done, I walk to my local and get a pint and a shot and write them down. I have no idea why I record them. Rereading them is very, very boring. I think it's just how I return.
Over the years, I've done it about 150 times. Last week I did my last annual double float, which is 3.5 hours (right after COVID it was five hours). It's my last annual, because I intend to do it every other month going forward.
This is room 4 in Float On in Southeast Portland Oregon. It helped me keep my job much longer than I would have otherwise. It's guided my greater decisions . It's allowed me to revisit memories I didn't know I had
The door to the right is like a closet with the floor covered with water with so much salt in it that I can float with my face above the water. It's warm enough that I quickly forget what is water and what is my skin and the warm air around it. It's dark and silent.
Just walking into the room, just getting the reminder email, removes everything from my head and the tension in my shoulders melts.
When I get in and turn off the light, visions start almost immediately. Today it was a massive eye with a dark green iris. Sometimes, once I see something, words come to me. They nearly never relate to the image. The last hundred or so floats, I've tried to remember at least three of these. When the float is done, I walk to my local and get a pint and a shot and write them down. I have no idea why I record them. Rereading them is very, very boring. I think it's just how I return.
the backrooms of your psyche
I’ve often wondered what a sensory deprivation tank would be like for me. I have aphantasia, so I normally can’t see mental images, but it’s possible that time in a tank could jump start imagery. As for the journals: I read a book about writing where the author talked about journaling every day, but not to be read later. They were just to keep the words and ideas flowing. Maybe your journals aren’t something similar.
@dogwelder I hear a lot that floating is like last meditation, and I get that. If you can get mental images during disciplined meditation, then floating will probably bring it on.
I have had periods in my life where hallucinations come to me out of the blue during normal times, so floating is like turning on the TV.
Regardless, it's worth a try. If you come to Portland, the float is on me.
And I totally get that unread diary idea. It is more ritual than record for me.
I have had periods in my life where hallucinations come to me out of the blue during normal times, so floating is like turning on the TV.
Regardless, it's worth a try. If you come to Portland, the float is on me.
And I totally get that unread diary idea. It is more ritual than record for me.
This sounds a lot like a guided ketamine course I took - visions, and they highly encouraged journaling afterwards. I want to try this next.
I think Richard Feynman was fond of using ket in sensory deprivation tanks. I'd like to try the combo but seems a little risky, TBQH.
@dogwelder how do you navigate while biking? I dated someone with aphantasia, and she had to navigate... anecdotally? Meaning, "take 4th to pike, turn left until you cross the freeway, then turn left at Melrose", as opposed to having a picture of a map in mind, and following that visual to get where one would want to go.
I was gonna say I recognize that Float tank.
There aren't popular over here in Belfast, I really miss doing them.
There aren't popular over here in Belfast, I really miss doing them.
Lucy Bellwoods comic on it is also great: https://thenib.com/flip-the...
@mrzarquon that's great. Graham is still involved on the board.
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claude
not shown: you
bout to drop this into general work chat with no context
AI is going great
If this is meant to illustrate how we're blindly installing AI into the critical paths of our infrastructure and taking for granted it will work without understanding what it's doing, then these are accurate and perfectly appropriate diagrams.
buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo
also: the chicken PowerPoint
also: the chicken PowerPoint
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source: https://www.rulesofthumb.org/
via Kevin Kelly’s indispensable Cool Tools newsletter: https://us5.campaign-archive.com/...
via Kevin Kelly’s indispensable Cool Tools newsletter: https://us5.campaign-archive.com/...
The bit about the rental property is certainly dated, and completely off for urban properties. For instance, if the second half of this duplex were rented out, for what they are asking, then $2030, multiplied by 100, it would be down $150,000 from what it would sell for right now.
@0y3ahSansAcut3 - That stuck out at me, too. The house I rent would be undervalued by about half of its actual market value if 100 months of rent being market price held true.
Rule of thumb: to generate engagement, try a list of assertions that will get people talking.
I can't possibly remember all of these. I'm going to have to print this out, fold it up and put it in my wallet. Then, forget all about it.
@B6FA798A3449 I use a corollary of that at work: If nobody wants to document something, just document it incorrectly, and everybody will gladly tell you every specific thing you did wrong .
The one about height at 3 years old, is why my daughter's tonsils came out at 18 months, I could not keep her well, and she had dropped from the 100th percentile for length to the 25th. By the time she was three, she had grown back to lanky.
Rule of thumb: if you bite your thumb at me, sir, at least own it.
I'm kinda wanting @tweedlydo to wiegh in on the third bullet even though it may not be her area of expertise. Seventeen seems like a lot of earth for one casket.
And the fourth from the bottom? If it's teenagers, increase the degrees F by 1.5 degrees per person.
And the fourth from the bottom? If it's teenagers, increase the degrees F by 1.5 degrees per person.
@m3moellering When I was doing calculations on HVAC back in the 90s, it was: average person is 100 watts. Teenagers are 120 watts. The elderly were 75 watts. If you are now mentally comparing people's heat output to incandescent lightbulbs, that's not a bug... it's a feature.
@1f2frfbf Vindiction!!!!!
How the heck is 17 wheelbarrow loads of dirt still going to accomodate the modern Western physique?
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A 7-panel comic book page (3 over 1 over 3), showing in the first row a rainy city exterior and then a building through a window, in the second Catwoman entering an enormous apartment with a huge painting of flowers, and in the third, Catwoman moving the painting and beginning to open the safe behind it, only to be interrupted by Batman's shadow. All done in moody blues.
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a young girl in a headscarf is apprehended by two older women in full black coverings. The back of the young girl's shirt reads "Punk is not Ded"
Hate to hear this.
just saw nate powell memorializing her on instagram and was shocked to hear. RIP to a real one.
Sooooo sad.
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Intricate stone carving
From the cemetery in Scarborough, Yorkshire UK
Do you have more information where this is?
A remarkable piece of carving.
A remarkable piece of carving.
Are you goin' to Scarborough Fair, parsley, sage, rosemary, and, thyme? Remember me to the one who lives there, she once was a true love of mine...
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black and white photograph: rows and rows of bicyclists pedal past the photographer, backlit by the morning sun. to their right is a deeply-shadowed tree, and to the right, pedestrians in shade.
via magnum photos' instagram post for world bicycle day:
https://www.instagram.com/p...
more info:
https://store.magnumphotos.com/products...
https://theatticbyviu.substack.com/p...
https://www.instagram.com/p...
more info:
https://store.magnumphotos.com/products...
https://theatticbyviu.substack.com/p...
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Screenshot of a baseball game between the Mets and the Mariners, showing Mets first basement Eric Young #29 standing in front of first base, occupied by Cole Young #2, with Mariners first base coach Eric Young, Jr. #53 behind them.
Obviously.
Sort of how ZZ Top drummer Frank Beard is the only one in the band that doesn't have a beard.
I mean the real question is how a toddler is good enough at baseball to make it to first.
@ardgedee Who?
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Two detectives from The Wire in a shadowy room with the caption “Yo dickhead, where you been at?”
We’ve been rewatching The Wire
rated TV-MA for extreme dollhouse action
(i really need to go back and watch the rest of it someday when i have HBO again)
Huh, interesting. I've also felt the pull to rewatch The Wire lately.
Someone - either Alan Sepinwall or at the AV Club - once wrote a review I've never forgotten, which was that "Deadwood", "Sopranos" and "The Wire" best represented America because they showed America at its different stages (slightly out of order in terms of when the shows aired): Deadwood its uber capitalistic, corrupt birth while also mired in a sense of community and wrong vs right; Sopranos in the middle of its lifespan, flailing about in the result of what won the aftermath of its birth; and Wire as its inevitable decline and death, showcasing how very much the sins of capitalism, lack of moral care, and thus the immoral choices in its birth led to its bitter end. At the time I thought it a rather over the top characterization - hey, I had come up through the 90s, when everything did seem like it could only get better, even though I was naive about the rot and Reaganism underneath - but now I understand that commentary in a way I didn't then.
Anyway, lately I've been thinking about that a lot. As great as The Sopranos was, I really do think The Wire and Deadwood capture America in a way very few pieces of media have . . . and of the two, perhaps in that desperate way we use media to undestand our world - only in this case I find my attempt clawing and mewling to fully comprehend what's happening - The Wire is to what I've returned.
Someone - either Alan Sepinwall or at the AV Club - once wrote a review I've never forgotten, which was that "Deadwood", "Sopranos" and "The Wire" best represented America because they showed America at its different stages (slightly out of order in terms of when the shows aired): Deadwood its uber capitalistic, corrupt birth while also mired in a sense of community and wrong vs right; Sopranos in the middle of its lifespan, flailing about in the result of what won the aftermath of its birth; and Wire as its inevitable decline and death, showcasing how very much the sins of capitalism, lack of moral care, and thus the immoral choices in its birth led to its bitter end. At the time I thought it a rather over the top characterization - hey, I had come up through the 90s, when everything did seem like it could only get better, even though I was naive about the rot and Reaganism underneath - but now I understand that commentary in a way I didn't then.
Anyway, lately I've been thinking about that a lot. As great as The Sopranos was, I really do think The Wire and Deadwood capture America in a way very few pieces of media have . . . and of the two, perhaps in that desperate way we use media to undestand our world - only in this case I find my attempt clawing and mewling to fully comprehend what's happening - The Wire is to what I've returned.
A great rewatch.
@williwaw That's an interesting thought so I had to go look it up! Thanks for sharing. I think it was this podcast: https://web.archive.org/web...
I'm definitely overdue for a rewatch as well.
I first watched The Wire right around the time Season 5 was wrapping up, after hearing a lot of "greatest show ever made" discussion in multiple places. I had heard it was bit of a slow burn, and my impression as I worked my way through season 1 was that the show was just a well-done, very interesting police drama - very good, but not quite living up to the hype.
*possible spoilers* Then a thing happened at the end of E10. That's when I realized just how much I had gotten to know (and care about, and empathize with) the characters. Not just the one the thing happened to, but the others who portrayed panic and fear in a way I don't think I've ever seen on a television show or movie. Never have I been happier to be watching something on demand where I could move to the next episode - that must have been absolutely brutal for anyone who had to wait a week.
I first watched The Wire right around the time Season 5 was wrapping up, after hearing a lot of "greatest show ever made" discussion in multiple places. I had heard it was bit of a slow burn, and my impression as I worked my way through season 1 was that the show was just a well-done, very interesting police drama - very good, but not quite living up to the hype.
*possible spoilers* Then a thing happened at the end of E10. That's when I realized just how much I had gotten to know (and care about, and empathize with) the characters. Not just the one the thing happened to, but the others who portrayed panic and fear in a way I don't think I've ever seen on a television show or movie. Never have I been happier to be watching something on demand where I could move to the next episode - that must have been absolutely brutal for anyone who had to wait a week.
A little slow, a little late
A life, Jimmy? You know what that is? It's the stuff that happens when you're waiting for moments that never come
A life, Jimmy? You know what that is? It's the stuff that happens when you're waiting for moments that never come
He was born Po-lice.
@williwaw Really interesting, and jibes with how i feel about the Wire, the many subplots all have that similar theme of displaying the consequences from a history of choices. I haven't seen Deadwood, might have to remedy that after we finish this rewatch
Just finished “the Boroughs” on Netflix with Clark Peters and I immediately thought it’s time to rewatch The Wire.
Omar coming!
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Black bicycle helmet with dents and scrapes.
Went mountain biking on my lunch break yesterday, as I often do, here in town. Trails aren't too crazy - lots of roots, some steep climbs, some loose surfaces - but overall pretty mild. I was just there Monday for my weekly group ride, and ride the place often enough I know it well. Good ride overall, with a PR on the first/biggest climb, and at a quick enough pace to add some extra distance.
Then as I was wrapping up, my head found a low-hanging branch that wasn't there two days earlier. It wasn't enough to cause a crash, but I definitely felt the impact, and put a couple of sizable dents and scrapes on my helmet. I still had a headache two hours later, and thanks to having a neuropsychologist wife who knows all the bad things that could potentially be, we made a trip to urgent care to confirm it was a mild concussion and nothing more serious. Symptoms were nothing worse than a headache, and I'm fine this morning.
The helmet did its job. The kind of amazing thing is I've been riding seriously enough to know I need to wear a helmet since the early 90's, and this is the first one I've destroyed. Usually they get replaced because of age, or when they get gross, and this one was quickly approaching both of those points. I'll be happy to continue with this mandatory replacement interval in the future.
Then as I was wrapping up, my head found a low-hanging branch that wasn't there two days earlier. It wasn't enough to cause a crash, but I definitely felt the impact, and put a couple of sizable dents and scrapes on my helmet. I still had a headache two hours later, and thanks to having a neuropsychologist wife who knows all the bad things that could potentially be, we made a trip to urgent care to confirm it was a mild concussion and nothing more serious. Symptoms were nothing worse than a headache, and I'm fine this morning.
The helmet did its job. The kind of amazing thing is I've been riding seriously enough to know I need to wear a helmet since the early 90's, and this is the first one I've destroyed. Usually they get replaced because of age, or when they get gross, and this one was quickly approaching both of those points. I'll be happy to continue with this mandatory replacement interval in the future.
Oof! I’m glad you were wearing that helmet!
Yay for safety! Glad you're OK.
This is why i always wear my helmet on trails, it's the dumb things you can't always plan for that get you. Glad you're going to be ok.
@m3moellering @bezt Thanks!
@wjcstp Exactly. Most of my stupid crashes the last few years have been places I knew really well, and probably wasn't being as careful as I needed to be.
@wjcstp Exactly. Most of my stupid crashes the last few years have been places I knew really well, and probably wasn't being as careful as I needed to be.
Yup yup. The bike accidents that mess you up the most usually end up being the dorky ones like falling over because you couldn't unclip fast enough, or hitting your head on a low branch.
Glad you had protection, got care quickly and know what to do.
Glad you had protection, got care quickly and know what to do.
woof! glad you're alright and glad you're wearing a helmet!
OW!
WHAT TOWN CAN YOU RIDE TRAILS ON YOUR LUNCH BREAK?
@shitleopard Granville, Ohio - one of many perks of living here and working from home. Not my favorite trails, but riding on dirt is always better than pavement. We also have a paved rail-trail when it's too muddy for off-road, and plenty of country roads.
@ardgedee Always. My last few mishaps were caused by unexpectedly-deep gravel on the way back from the trail, clipping the support post of the guardrail the trial was paralleling, and running out of momentum on a narrow climb that had deep ditches on each side.
I have a coworker who has been in a world of mediocre shit for WEEKS thanks to a concussion. I am seriously hopeful you move on past this easily because he's super frustrated with his lack of progress : (
@samh Concussions suck the most because treatment often amounts to "I'll give you a candy if you don't think about elephants at all for the next three years."
@shitleopard For a while in the 90s I was working in a professional building hard by a field that had been slated for a suburban development that never happened, so the local riders had done some clandestine trailbuilding, making sure that no part of the trail got within 50 feet of the road where the weeds got thin enough that you could see people.
It was pretty awesome lunchtime ride, particularly if the morning involved having to deal with a super-special client.
@shitleopard For a while in the 90s I was working in a professional building hard by a field that had been slated for a suburban development that never happened, so the local riders had done some clandestine trailbuilding, making sure that no part of the trail got within 50 feet of the road where the weeds got thin enough that you could see people.
It was pretty awesome lunchtime ride, particularly if the morning involved having to deal with a super-special client.
@samh @ardgedee I got lucky, effectively it just feels like I have a sinus headache that comes and goes, which is fairly standard for me anyway. And no restrictions, I can ride again right away - though the doctor did advise not hitting the tree again.
Glad I didn't cheap out on a helmet, nor will I this time. My old one was one of the top-rated by Virginia Tech when I got it (still very highly rated). It was more of a glance than direct hit, I suspect the MIPs setup probably helped quite a bit.
Glad I didn't cheap out on a helmet, nor will I this time. My old one was one of the top-rated by Virginia Tech when I got it (still very highly rated). It was more of a glance than direct hit, I suspect the MIPs setup probably helped quite a bit.
I was told, very early on, that plastic will deteriorate over time and the protection that your helmet provides will naturally go south.
It is compulsory to wear a helmet when riding here and I buy a new one every 4 or 5 years or if I have a stack.
It is compulsory to wear a helmet when riding here and I buy a new one every 4 or 5 years or if I have a stack.
@roonie It's debated and I really haven't seen anything conclusive, but I've heard the same thing. Whether or not that is accurate, I think there is a fair point to be made that the little bumps and knocks a well-used helmet takes over time will eventually compromise it.
This helmet was built 3/22, so it would have been due before too long anyway. I also ride a lot and sweat heavily during our humid summers, so it was starting to get kind of gross.
This helmet was built 3/22, so it would have been due before too long anyway. I also ride a lot and sweat heavily during our humid summers, so it was starting to get kind of gross.
I need to buy a new helmet. Especially because I’m on blood thinners and a brain bleed won’t stop by itself.
I had two bike falls last year, both stupid. Hit a parked car, the only parked car in that whole street so it just didn’t register and I was talking with by friend until I saw it, and I was too close. The second one was when the bungee cord of my front basket came loose and the hook got stuck in my wheel until my front wheel blocked completely and I went over the handle bars. In both cases my body hit the tarmac, but my head didn’t. But there was some extreme quick de-acceleration involved so I probably had some light concussions. And the most amazing bruises.
New helmet time.
I had two bike falls last year, both stupid. Hit a parked car, the only parked car in that whole street so it just didn’t register and I was talking with by friend until I saw it, and I was too close. The second one was when the bungee cord of my front basket came loose and the hook got stuck in my wheel until my front wheel blocked completely and I went over the handle bars. In both cases my body hit the tarmac, but my head didn’t. But there was some extreme quick de-acceleration involved so I probably had some light concussions. And the most amazing bruises.
New helmet time.
Update: helmet bought! Thanks for the nudge.
@mare Glad I could be of help!
Ironically I had actually just replaced my helmet last week. I found a crack in my current one and couldn't remember the source of it. I'm glad the doctor suggested you not hit the tree again ; P
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Happy Birthday!
🎉
HEPPY BERFDAY!
Have Brooklyn give yerself a big birthday smooch from me!
Happy Birthday!
Happy NY Birthday!
Happy belated birthday 🎂 !
Habbidy Burbiday!
hbd!
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Illustration art of a portly gentleman with a dog having a gander at a very well stocked deli case in a market. Cured meats and cheeses hang from the ceiling.
source: https://bsky.app/profile...
Bill Charmatz, from the Esquire Cookbook (1955).
https://fishinkblog.com/2014...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
https://fishinkblog.com/2014...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
@bezt thank you for the source
@bezt thank you!
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A roe deer among purple flowers, Hungary.
Purple haze: a roe deer in a meadow of flowering consolida near Gyöngyöspata, northern Hungary
#Photography #PéterKomka EPA
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...
#Photography #PéterKomka EPA
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...
Holy Crap! Surveillance Roes! I hate those.
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Retro comic frame of stampeding dinosaurs saying “GRUMMMFFF!” I don’t know the province.
source: https://bsky.app/profile...
Why they threw the rock. Everyone was afraid to land here.
The onomatopoeia reminds me…
My department has invented a cryptid called The Grumpsch and over time more and more lore develops around it. A group of them is a Violation of Grumpsch, and they subsist largely on Grumpscht, though if they are particularly upset at someone they will hide behind a sherb (due to someone misspelling shrub on a document) and attack. The only way to fend them off is to stand arms akimbo.
We may need to find more interesting work.
My department has invented a cryptid called The Grumpsch and over time more and more lore develops around it. A group of them is a Violation of Grumpsch, and they subsist largely on Grumpscht, though if they are particularly upset at someone they will hide behind a sherb (due to someone misspelling shrub on a document) and attack. The only way to fend them off is to stand arms akimbo.
We may need to find more interesting work.
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paging art wells to the mezzanine
@nikkuneko 😂😂😂😂😂
Salmiak? Or is that too much to hope for?
E for Excellent
WANT
(If for no other reason than I want my tongue to be black)
(If for no other reason than I want my tongue to be black)
Daaaaaaasmn
ALSO WANT
@ardgedee If you'd like to give something similar a try, every year for the last few years friends abroad have been sending me a box for Xmas (like this https://mltshp.com/p/1O5YW) but I never manage to get through it all in time before it starts to dry out*. So I've taken to giving the leftovers a quick pulse in the blender to make 'em chunky and then make very heavily loaded vanilla ice cream/gelato/frozen yogurt with the chunks, and it's DELICIOUS.
*only because I'm a greedy gus who opens all the packages to try them all out at once instead of eating one kind at a time like a logical person
@ardgedee If you'd like to give something similar a try, every year for the last few years friends abroad have been sending me a box for Xmas (like this https://mltshp.com/p/1O5YW) but I never manage to get through it all in time before it starts to dry out*. So I've taken to giving the leftovers a quick pulse in the blender to make 'em chunky and then make very heavily loaded vanilla ice cream/gelato/frozen yogurt with the chunks, and it's DELICIOUS.
*only because I'm a greedy gus who opens all the packages to try them all out at once instead of eating one kind at a time like a logical person
yes very want
@williwaw BRILLIANT!
fwiw I've had three or maybe four of the licorices in that photo. The weirdest get was probably the Rheila, which I found at a flea market booth of a vendor selling Amazon discards*. $1 for a bundle of three packs... I keep one on my desk and treat them like breath mints.
*(Not the same thing as returns. Stuff that's near expiration or discontinued (like food, or novelty "Happy New Year 2024" bobblehead dolls, etc.) or goods sold by Amazon vendors who closed their accounts or got shut down or whatever. So, like, I'm not buying used food.)
fwiw I've had three or maybe four of the licorices in that photo. The weirdest get was probably the Rheila, which I found at a flea market booth of a vendor selling Amazon discards*. $1 for a bundle of three packs... I keep one on my desk and treat them like breath mints.
*(Not the same thing as returns. Stuff that's near expiration or discontinued (like food, or novelty "Happy New Year 2024" bobblehead dolls, etc.) or goods sold by Amazon vendors who closed their accounts or got shut down or whatever. So, like, I'm not buying used food.)
@ardgedee Yeah, I make it a lot!! It works well on its own, especially after a hot day, but I've found the ice cream version pairs well with gingersnap crumbles or any kind of citrus zest on top, and my husband particularly likes it paired with almonds or mint. We both like it with some lingonberry jam or cranberries (with just a touch of orange zest) if the season is right.
Also I have to admit I've splashed some orange liqueors and once even some brandy in the bowl with the ice cream, which admittedly only makes sense if you think of - and like - cocktails like a corpse reviver or sazerac.
Also I have to admit I've splashed some orange liqueors and once even some brandy in the bowl with the ice cream, which admittedly only makes sense if you think of - and like - cocktails like a corpse reviver or sazerac.
The Grateful Dead of Frozen Desserts
dropsmaak
Dropsmaaklaag
Dropsmaakstukjes
Dropsmaakkern
Playing scrabble in Dutch is lovely. I also miss eating licorice, but too many expensive milled-ceramic crowns have been lifted by the suction power of liquorice. Resulting in needing to use a sieve.
Dropsmaakstukjes
Dropsmaakkern
Playing scrabble in Dutch is lovely. I also miss eating licorice, but too many expensive milled-ceramic crowns have been lifted by the suction power of liquorice. Resulting in needing to use a sieve.
Hmmm…🤔
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The Cheney Sentinel, Kansas, May 29, 1913
I would love to see this apparently regular newspaper factoid feature revived.
I would love to see this apparently regular newspaper factoid feature revived.
Coulda sworn there was a Tumblr or Blogger account dedicated to the topic, because there was a period in the late '00s when these were frequently circulating.
@ardgedee https://www.tumblr.com/yesterda...
@karmakaze ❤️
most of your arm would be frozen solid, anyway
Sensory pain (type III sensory fibers sending signals to nociceptors of neospinothalamic tract) travel at 3 - 30 m/s ( ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki... ). I'm guessing the increased speed is from the wider fiber diameter, which I presume are pretty large for a person's hands and fingers, so let's presume the higher velocity.
1 AU == 149597870700 m
You'd feel the pain a little over 158 years later.
1 AU == 149597870700 m
You'd feel the pain a little over 158 years later.
@cristin @neuracnu
I KNEW someone here would be nerdy enough to bring facts to the matter. Thank you for your service!
I KNEW someone here would be nerdy enough to bring facts to the matter. Thank you for your service!
Thank you for doing the math!!
@neuracnu thankyou, now I can make my decision accurately informed
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a four panel comic, depicting a stylized purple ghost with antlers carrying a puffy orange cloud labeled "feeling". in the second frame, it walks up to a machine labeled "feelings processor", which is rusty and covered with cobwebs. in the third frame, the ghost carries the cloud over some kind of enclosed closet or door, bulging with other clouds, tentacles, and branches. in the last frame, the ghost is saying "i'll deal with it later" and shoves it into the crowded space.
via larkness on instagram (first panel in portuguese, second in english):
https://www.instagram.com/p...
(addendum: sequel gag: https://www.instagram.com/p... )
artist's site:
https://corvomateus.com/
https://www.instagram.com/p...
(addendum: sequel gag: https://www.instagram.com/p... )
artist's site:
https://corvomateus.com/
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stop-motion animation loop of a brown clay wall suddenly erupting into faces and arms of about 10 people singing and gesturing, and then melting back into the wall
"Round car, ooh whoa!"
@neuracnu o_O
I need to watch that film. Huge fan of both Twain’s and Vinton’s work.
I need to watch that film. Huge fan of both Twain’s and Vinton’s work.
@neuracnu also, what befell his studio - and later him - was just kharmically fuuucked up: https://ejunkieblog.com/2025...