cyberghostface: (Two-Face)
cyberghostface ([personal profile] cyberghostface) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-09-22 02:30 pm

Two-Face flips a coin

 

From 'Dork' by Evan Dorkin.
astrogirl: (Missy)
astrogirl ([personal profile] astrogirl) wrote2025-09-22 10:23 am
Entry tags:

I Keep Writing Twelve/Missy For This Exchange, And It Keeps Amusing Me

Since authors have been revealed now, I can admit to writing this little thing for the Just Married exchange:

Title: Maybe This Time
Fandom: Doctor Who
Characters/Relationships: Twelfth Doctor/Missy
Rating: Apparently I rated it Teen, but it might not even merit that much.
Summary: Doctor/Master divorces: one. Annulments: several. Marriages: it seems even they've lost count. But, hey, at least this marriage wasn't their fault! Well, OK. It was only indirectly their fault.
Tags: Accidental marriage(s), Annulment(s), previous Doctor/Master divorce, Banter, Missy's time in the Vault, Humor, A little bittersweet at the end
Length: ~2600 words
Author's Notes: Written for natequarter for the Just Married exchange, for the absolutely delightful prompt suggestion of "accidentally got married yet again and are trying to annul the latest marriage, but can't get it done because all their other marriages keep on getting in the way."

Maybe This Time
neonvincent: For posts about food and cooking (All your bouillabaisse are belong to us)
neonvincent ([personal profile] neonvincent) wrote2025-09-22 12:20 pm
Entry tags:
Crazy Eddie's Motie News ([syndicated profile] neonvincent_feed) wrote2025-09-22 10:56 am

'When Tolkien changed The Hobbit' for Hobbit Day on the Autumnal Equinox

Posted by Pinku-Sensei

Happy Hobbit Day on the Autumnal Equinox!* I'm featuring Robert of In Deep Geek again with his tale of When Tolkien changed The Hobbit.



Robert is right; the original version of the riddle game in The Hobbit makes no sense given the powers and history of The One Ring and Gollum's relationship with it in The Lord of the Rings. The new version sets up the sequels. More interestingly, the original tale remains in The Fellowship of the Ring as a cover story, even after it has been replaced in the new editions of The Hobbit. I respect that clever use of the retcon. I also didn't know any of this before I watched Robert's video, so I learned something new. It's always a good day when I learn something new.

Enough fantasy. Time for reality with The National Weather Desk asking and answering What Actually Causes the Seasons? Meteorologist Breaks Down Fall Equinox.

Ever wonder why fall feels so different from spring even though they're both equinoxes? Meteorologist Evan Chickvara reveals the science behind why identical daylight hours create completely different weather patterns.
Evan Chickvara does a good job of explaining why temperature lags behind hours of daylight. It takes even longer for water to warm up and cool down than ground, so seasons are even more delayed in Michigan and other parts of the Great Lakes states.

Speaking of the Great Lakes, I'd heard of Manhattanhenge, but not Chicagohenge. Watch The Weather Channel's Fall Equinox Episode Of 'Chicagohenge'.

Two times a year, the sunrise and sunset perfectly align with some streets in the heart of Chicago, putting on a show between the skyscrapers. The fall equinox episode of “Chicagohenge” is about to happen, but will the weather mess up the view?
Detroit also has a lot of east-west streets, so we would see the Sun rise and set down our major streets as well, but it's raining here now, so not today. Darn.

*It's also World Rhino Day, National Elephant Appreciation Day, and Car Free Day today. I'll save those for when I have more time and energy.
lydamorehouse: (Default)
lydamorehouse ([personal profile] lydamorehouse) wrote2025-09-22 09:42 am

Last Day of Con, First Day of Adventure

washington monument at night
Image: classic image of the Washington monument at night.

Sunday morning started out much better than the day before as Naomi and I had been invited to breakfast with Joe and Gay Haldeman. We ended up having a rather leisurely brunch talking about life, the universe, and everything. Everything that everyone says about how nice and welcoming Gay and Joe are is one hundred percent true.

I, thankfully, had no panels at all on Sunday. I’d love to say that meant no one mispronunced my name, but alas. A couple of the people on concom just never got it right, despite the fact that I spent a lot of time making sure I put names to faces and knew at least one fact about them, ie, Kathy the former postal lawyer; Zen Lizard (one of the many Sams) who, shockingly, is a fan of lizards; Kim who loves animals and volunteered at the zoo; Roger, the IT guy; and Kimbery, who is easy since he’s a man named Kimberly, but also he was Naomi’s liason and so we heard his entire lifestory on the 30 minute drive from the airport (highlight reel includes, but it not limited to, his extensive time in the foreign service, being a Mormon, and a member of MENSA.)

I think all of them called me Lid-ah.

Ah well.

Knowing that we’d be starting our adventures after the con ended, I wandered over to the metro station--which is directly across from the hotel--and purchased a three day pass for myself and Naomi. That would cover Sunday night, all day Monday, and our trip to the airport on Tuesday.

I wandered back to the con hotel in time to see Scott Edelman in his fish head rushing off to do a reading. I probably should have followed him, since I did want to hear him read, but I figured (wrongly) that the program guide would direct me to where I needed to go when I was feeling ready. But, no! Not only was Scott’s reading not in the program, I could not figure out what room he was in until I overheard someone saying that their reading was around the corner and down the hall near the Green Room. I managed to walk right in during Scott’s Q&A. I’d missed the reading! Curses!

I stayed in the room to listen to the next person (who, unlike Scott, was listed in the program,) Morgan Hazelwood. Morgan was the delightful moderator of our Romance in SF panel and it was fun to hear her read her work.

From there, I sat in the back to listen to the last half hour of “Religion in SF” which Naomi was on with our mutual friend Walter Hunt.

The funny thing about Capclave is that while it is much larger than Diversicon, on occasion, it felt much smaller. Naomi and I discussed this later and we decided that possibly this sense came from the fact that in addition to a three track (four or five if you count the two rooms devoted to author’s readings) there was a gaming room and a dealer’s room. This ended up spreading out the hundred plus members quite a bit. I counted. There were fifteen people listening to a six person panel. So, the energy of the convention was always sort of low.

I have now, of course, been struck with fear that John and I have over-programmed Gaylaxicon. I guess we’ll see how it plays out!

After the religion panel, Naomi had another panel in the same room, which was “Genre Fiction versus Lit Fic.” Despite having even fewer people in the audience, the panel was lively. I think because we all get kind of worked up about mainstream literature and who gets to cross over to it and who doesn’t. (Or we get worked up because we never want to and we have FEELINGS about lit fic.) It was a good mix of panelists, too--some from the “I don’t even like the term speculative fic because it’s too fancy” camp to the PhD and MFA student. It was a great way to end the con, as far as I was concerned.

Afterwards, Naomi did some last minute hanging out with folks and I headed upstairs to prep for adventure, by which I mean snoozling.

At some point around 3 pm, we headed to DC.

I have been desperately trying to replenish my stationary stock and so we got a hot tip from a native that we should check out Jenni Bick in Dupont Circle. The red line, which our hotel is on, goes direct to Dupont Circle and add to that Naomi had a restaurant she wanted to revisit from a previous trip to DC, City Lights of China, that was nearby. So off we went.

I am a huge fan of public transportation. I find the DC metro system to be fantastic in this regard. Plus, their day passes include buses. Rockford/our hotel is, during rush hour, about a half hour from DC. I don’t know why, but that time goes faster on trains.

Jenni Bick was, alas, a bust. Americans do not understand stationary any more. (We did? In the 1970s and even into the 80s you could find huge pads of stationary at all sorts of stores.) Nowadays, we seem to that think ten sheets and ten envelopes for $30 is a great deal. Y’all, ten sheets is two letters--or, on a good day, ONE. I want a packet of 30 super-thin sheets with weird cartoon people on it for $10 to $20, what is wrong with you all???

Sigh.

It was a delightfully pretty shop and I am proud of myself for not buying all the postcards they had in the window.

From there, we stopped at a great comic book shop called Fantom Comics. This was possibly the first comicbook shop I have ever been to where all the graphic novels were organized by subject, like “action/adventure,” “horror,” “romance,” etc., and MANGA WAS MIXED IN. There was no separate manga section! It was kind of nice, actually? It felt weirdly less stigmatizing. I didn’t buy anything, but I took a lot of pictures of titles I want to look up.

Their unisex bathroom had the best art!

bathroom art at fantom
Image: bathroom art at Fantom

We ended up taking a bus to where Naomi’s restaurant was--only to discover it was now only a takeout window. Alas! Luckily, it was on a strip of a ton of restaurants and we were able to find a lovely ramen place just up the street.

Then, because we wanted to see some of the monuments lit up at night, we hopped another bus for a quick jaunt and then wandered towards the Lincoln memorial. What was striking was, in fact, the number of National Guard everwhere. I knew they’d be there thanks to the news, etc., but yet somehow I forgot? Someone at the con said that the Guard tend to hang out in large clots at the subway stations and wander the Smithsonian Mall area, and that did, in fact, seem to be true. Naomi was curious and so asked some of the Guard that we ran into where they were originally from and they were all from West Virginia. (Which kind of explained HOW WHITE they all were. Like, the reason we started asking was because they were noticeably missing PoCs.)

Anyway, the walk around the monuments was a bit of a hike.

There was a sign I pointed out to Naomi which read “The Mall is big! Think about renting a bike!” Because, yes. I forgot how much walking a person ends up doing in DC. My feet were a bit sore at the end of the day. Hopefully, I’ll be up for all we have planned for tomorrow which, at the moment, includes checking out the fish market, the Black History museum (Smithsonian) and/or maybe the Postal Museum. I intentionally did not plan a lot for us because frankly, even though both Naomi and I have been to DC and the Smithsonian Mall before… there’s just no way to ever see it all I suspect, unless you live here.

Okay! Off for more adventure!

dewline: (canadian media)
On the DEWLine 2.0: Dwight Williams ([personal profile] dewline) wrote2025-09-22 09:41 am

A Reminder re: Hey!Cafe

I'm maintaining an account on that Penticton, BC-based social media service, partly as a fallback measure in case I lose access to Mastodon, Bluesky and Twitter-as-was, and partly as a means of supporting made-in-Canada social media. You can find my account here:

https://hey.cafe/@dewline

Yes, I expect to set up something with Gander as well, for similar reasons.
dewline: Exclamation: "Hear, Hear!" (celebration)
On the DEWLine 2.0: Dwight Williams ([personal profile] dewline) wrote2025-09-22 09:37 am

Happier Birthdays to [personal profile] matociquala!

Hoping you're doing well these days!
iamrman: (Franky)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-09-22 02:30 pm

Rom: Spaceknight #30

Writer: Bill Mantlo

Pencils: Sal Buscema

Inks: Joe Sinnott


Clairton is (seemingly) free of the Dire Wraiths, so Rom decides a break is in order.


Read more... )

mishey22: (Default)
mishey22 ([personal profile] mishey22) wrote in [community profile] abc_onceupon2025-09-22 09:05 am

09/22/25

"Souls of the Departed" is the twelfth episode of Season Five of ABC's Once Upon a Time. It was written by Edward Kitsis & Adam Horowitz, and directed by Ralph Hemecker. It is the one hundredth episode of the series overall, and premiered on March 6, 2016.


iamrman: (Buggy)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-09-22 12:33 pm

Richard Dragon: Kung Fu Fighter #18

Writer: Dennis O’Neil

Pencils and inks: Ric Estrada


Who is the Bronze Tiger? The answer will shock you! (But not really.)


Read more... )

tcampbell1000 ([personal profile] tcampbell1000) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-09-21 07:58 pm

Moving Genres: JUSTICE LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL #8 (JLI 8/?)



Titled "Moving Day," this issue concerns the League members moving into their American, Russian, and French "embassies," a series of headquarterses to be networked by teleporter technology.

This was the first JLI story with no real super-fights in it. The JLI era would feature more "low-budget" stories like this--though not so many as people remember.

In the spirit of the end of the Cold War and the triumph of global capitalism, we begin with some blatant product placement.

This episode is brought to you by U-HAUL. )
iamrman: (Power)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-09-22 10:29 am

The Power of Shazam! (1995) #3

Writer: Jerry Ordway

Pencils: Peter Krause

Inks: Mike Manley


Mary Bromfield arrives in Fawcett City and falls victim to a kidnapping.


Read more... )

ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-09-21 11:43 pm

Education

The Learning Grove

As part of my ongoing series about reimagining education, I want to try something slightly different today. For this one, we will imagine that what I’m calling “The Living Curriculum” is already implemented, and I wil describe one aspect of it. For the sake of this exercise, we will need to suspend our disbelief for a littl while, and put aside questions of how we get from where we are now, to this mildly utopian imagining. The point is not to lay out a perfect plan of how to achieve an ideal education system, but rather, to explore a vision of what such a system might look like.

Read more... )
silver_chipmunk: (Default)
silver_chipmunk ([personal profile] silver_chipmunk) wrote2025-09-22 12:31 am

SHarecon day three

Got up at 7:30 today and had breakfast and coffee, then showered and dressed.

Then the con started, we had one panel, and then during the replay of the vid show I went through the loot from my three baskets of raffle wins. I weeded out the few duplicates of zines, and stashed everything I could fit in the stuff I have with me. Then I took the duplicates down to the con suit and arranged to have the bulk of the stuff shipped to me.

Then we had another panel, and finally we had the Comatose Dog Panel to finish up the con.

The last food came after that, and then I hung out in the con suit, chatting and playing Cards Against Humanity for a bunch of hours. By that time it was 8:30 so I called Middle Brother. He is fine, went to a park and then Applebees yesterday.

Then we watched vid until 11:30.

And then I came back to the room and had something to eat, and started here.

Gratitude List:

1. The FWiB.

2. The Con.

3. Middle Brother doing well.

4. Still have a night here.

5. Getting the zines shipped.

6. Bed soon.
ecosophia: (Default)
John Michael Greer ([personal profile] ecosophia) wrote2025-09-21 09:46 pm

Magic Monday

jung brings the heatIt's almost midnight, and so it's time to launch a new Magic Monday. Ask me anything about occultism, and with certain exceptions noted below, any question received by midnight Monday Eastern time will get an answer. Please note:  Any question or comment received after that point will not get an answer, and in fact will not be put through.  If you're in a hurry, or suspect you may be the 341,928th person to ask a question, please check out the very rough version 1.3 of The Magic Monday FAQ here

Also:
 I will not be putting through or answering any more questions about practicing magic around children. I've answered those in simple declarative sentences in the FAQ. If you read the FAQ and don't think your question has been answered, read it again. If that doesn't help, consider remedial reading classes; yes, it really is as simple and straightforward as the FAQ says.  And further:  I've decided that questions about getting goodies from spirits are also permanently off topic here. The point of occultism is to develop your own capacities, not to try to bully or wheedle other beings into doing things for you. I've discussed this in a post on my blog.

(The image? I've finished the sequence of my published books; while I decide what I want to do next, I have some memes to share.)

Buy Me A Coffee

Ko-Fi

I've had several people ask about tipping me for answers here, and though I certainly don't require that I won't turn it down. You can use either of the links above to access my online tip jar; Buymeacoffee is good for small tips, Ko-Fi is better for larger ones. (I used to use PayPal but they developed an allergy to free speech, so I've developed an allergy to them.) If you're interested in political and economic astrology, or simply prefer to use a subscription service to support your favorite authors, you can find my Patreon page here and my SubscribeStar page here
 
Bookshop logoI've also had quite a few people over the years ask me where they should buy my books, and here's the answer. Bookshop.org is an alternative online bookstore that supports local bookstores and authors, which a certain gargantuan corporation doesn't, and I have a shop there, which you can check out here. Please consider patronizing it if you'd like to purchase any of my books online.

And don't forget to look up your Pangalactic New Age Soul Signature at CosmicOom.com.

With that said, have at it!
File 770 ([syndicated profile] file770_feed) wrote2025-09-22 01:46 am

Pixel Scroll 9/21/25 Pixels, Pixels, Everywhere, And Not A Drop To Scroll

Posted by Mike Glyer

(1) A MATCH. Literary Hub contemplates “On Maggie Bradbury, the woman who ‘changed literature forever.’” A year after meeting, Marguerite (Maggie) and Ray Bradbury married in 1947: …Maggie got a job at an advertising agency so that Ray could stay … Continue reading