sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2020-03-30 09:41 pm

What is there to drink with just minimal risk of blindness or death?

[personal profile] spatch and I went for a walk in the rain this evening just to get out of the house. I approve of the daffodils sprouting through the chain-link and the hyacinths I saw growing in various yards along with the small blue star-bells that seem to be Siberian squills. The cherry trees on our street are just starting to blossom; I'll have to go back for them tomorrow even if it's raining again. They have such a short season. It turned out to be a day for links, so have some more.

1. [personal profile] skygiants, an actual archivist, has weighed in on the Internet Archive's National Emergency Library and the Author's Guild. It is useful information.

2. Courtesy of [personal profile] phi: ancient Egyptian bread baked yesterday. Literally, by the guy who last year was culturing ancient Egyptian yeast. It looks great.

3. Thanks to this extremely impressive bassoon cover of "Toxic," I wound up seeing the original music video by Britney Spears for the first time in my life. It's like La Femme Nikita by John Woo. The thing that interests me about the song is how well it works as an instrumental. My actual favorite version is by the Surfrajettes.

4. I agree with all of the meta, but I also just enjoy the original appreciation of Roger from Disney's 101 Dalmatians (1961). Anyone who can throw a sweater around their shoulders in such debonair, wicked impersonation is worth hanging on to.

5. Sally Wiener Grotta tells her family story of the 1918 flu, the neighborhood sprecher, and her aunt Rose. I had never heard of the Jewish tradition of the sprecher, who talks back the dying. I like it a lot. I like the idea of all of us being the lifeline of words, talking one another back, holding on.