Well, it did not take place—it did not take place
I was very frustratingly woken too many times in the night to get anything like the sleep I needed to make my body stop hurting, but in one of the lulls I dreamed that I had watched and was reviewing two movies with ZaSu Pitts and two movies with Van Heflin. The Pitts were pre-Codes, the Heflins both Westerns. Absolutely none of them existed when I woke. Obviously, I should watch something with ZaSu Pitts or Van Heflin. When I am not trying to finish my week's work in three days so as to afford Readercon. I wish this weekend had not been so comprehensively wiped out with heat.
Low points of yesterday included having to walk from Winter Hill to North Cambridge because the buses of a Sunday just preferred not to and having a dude just walk up to me and
rushthatspeaks while we were eating ice cream in Davis Square and try to insert himself into our interaction despite a united and visible refusal on either of our parts to acknowledge his presence as he just sort of hung over us (eventually he asked, "Are you guys smoking pot?" and we answered, "NO," and got up and left). Fortunately, high points included eating summer pudding with redcurrants and raspberries and watching the first two episodes of the new Fruits Basket with Rush-That-Speaks and
gaudior, not to mention the weather having cooled sufficiently that I could walk to North Cambridge without deliquescing into a pile of melted proteins on arrival. It looks like perfect seaside sunlight beyond my window now. I would rather be in the ocean even than watching a movie with Van Heflin. Have a couple of links.
1. I don't think I had ever heard of Trupa Trupa before, but this interview and the music video that provoked it got my attention. "The hate and evil are not abstract and we cannot accept it."
2. I'd known the song for years but never actually seen the video until I needed a link for a friend recently: The Moulettes, "Devil of Mine." It gives good underworld masked ball.
3. I am enjoying this thing where someone I knew in grad school is making the news for saying things that need to be heard: Ainsley Hawthorn, "Gender neutrality doesn't hurt children – it's part of our history." I also appreciate being introduced to the baby picture of FDR.
Low points of yesterday included having to walk from Winter Hill to North Cambridge because the buses of a Sunday just preferred not to and having a dude just walk up to me and
1. I don't think I had ever heard of Trupa Trupa before, but this interview and the music video that provoked it got my attention. "The hate and evil are not abstract and we cannot accept it."
2. I'd known the song for years but never actually seen the video until I needed a link for a friend recently: The Moulettes, "Devil of Mine." It gives good underworld masked ball.
3. I am enjoying this thing where someone I knew in grad school is making the news for saying things that need to be heard: Ainsley Hawthorn, "Gender neutrality doesn't hurt children – it's part of our history." I also appreciate being introduced to the baby picture of FDR.

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The twentieth century did a really hard swing in the wrong direction. I'm hoping we can swing it back.
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The thing where people's eyes are recognizable even when the rest of them is embryonic never ceases to amaze and on the whole charm me.
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You're welcome!
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That also sounds unsatisfying. I think it is exhausting just to be alive right now. I keep remembering earlier periods of my life when I was much more productive and reminding myself that I wasn't working flat out all the time and stressed about everything from rent and food money to the imminent heat death of the planet.
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You should still be allowed to get restful sleep!
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Years ago I read an unproduced play co-written by Saki (I think it was called A Watched Pot) in which one of the characters, complaining about the local society matron’s domineering ways and prudery, recounts how she even insisted, the previous May, on separate poles for boys and girls to dance round, and that she (the character recounting this) and the vicar had had the delicate task of questioning the younger, ambiguously-dressed children to figure out how to sort them: “One three-year-old resisted our most patient inquiries and finally had to dance around a little maypole of its own.”
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I didn't even try. I couldn't imagine anything but a trash fire.
“One three-year-old resisted our most patient inquiries and finally had to dance around a little maypole of its own.”
Good for the three-year-old! Yikes for the matron. Saki was remarkably prescient about how that kind of insistent disambiguating goes.
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I was just thinking of the kid who ends up with their own maypole, because they can't be categorized.
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That Moulettes video is amazing, and I see such a clear story in it. When I next get a free moment (not for four weeks, at least), I'll have to see if I can capture it.
My goodness, baby FDR looks like himself.
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Thank you. I'm just tired of it. First it was the heat and now it's pain. I would really like to enter Readercon not feeling completely strung out and behind my time on everything.
That Moulettes video is amazing, and I see such a clear story in it. When I next get a free moment (not for four weeks, at least), I'll have to see if I can capture it.
*quiet cheering*
(What's the next four weeks?)
My goodness, baby FDR looks like himself.
Right?! Like, that's not "Oh, I guess that baby grew up to be FDR," it's "Good grief, it's baby FDR. And he's adorable."
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I have no idea and I wish they wouldn't.
Or, Talmudically: LET HIM DIE, AND THEY MAY NOT CONVERSE WITH HIM BEHIND A FENCE.
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Unsurprisingly, I'm quite a fan of the latter high point.
*hugs hugs hugs*
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I am really enjoying it so far!
*hugs*
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For all that the 2001 anime was how I got into the series (and oh, how I loved it), I don't really think you're missing much by not having seen it. It had a lot of good things about it, but in the ways it fell down, it fell down hard.