Only the voluntary homage paid by the living to the unqualified and dangerous dead
I have managed very little with the day beyond capitalism and serving as a platform for sleeping cats, but I recognize the latter of these two activities as imperative. Have some links.
1. I had never before heard of "Waka Waka Bang Splat," an ASCII poem composed by Fred Bremmer and Steve Kroese around 1990. I liked this note about regional pronunciations, which of course contains some folk drift of its own.
2. As I am still not comfortable in theaters, I would not be attending Perfection, of a Kind: Britten vs Auden even were I in the right country for it, I just wish they were offering virtual tickets. Even if he's just reprising his scenes from The Habit of Art, I am charmed by the idea that Alex Jennings has become an interpreter of Britten—it was my successfully imprinting introduction to him as an actor. I didn't realize Night Mail (1936) was ever performed outside of its GPO film context.
3. Courtesy of
cyphomandra: on the other hand, the British Library is selling tickets for the livestream of The Dark is Rising and Other Stories: Susan Cooper and Natalie Haynes in Conversation. I can't remember what happened last year to prevent me listening to the radio adaptation, but I enjoyed its incidental music.
I don't think it is much of a news flash that I am very tired. Do I know anyone who's not?
1. I had never before heard of "Waka Waka Bang Splat," an ASCII poem composed by Fred Bremmer and Steve Kroese around 1990. I liked this note about regional pronunciations, which of course contains some folk drift of its own.
2. As I am still not comfortable in theaters, I would not be attending Perfection, of a Kind: Britten vs Auden even were I in the right country for it, I just wish they were offering virtual tickets. Even if he's just reprising his scenes from The Habit of Art, I am charmed by the idea that Alex Jennings has become an interpreter of Britten—it was my successfully imprinting introduction to him as an actor. I didn't realize Night Mail (1936) was ever performed outside of its GPO film context.
3. Courtesy of
I don't think it is much of a news flash that I am very tired. Do I know anyone who's not?

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That's so interesting to me as a difference. I can listen to radio plays much more easily than I can to audiobooks or podcasts. I still can't do anything else while listening, but I enjoy the experience a lot more.
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That makes sense. (I hope you enjoyed it.) Under normal conditions, I listen to music almost constantly while working or writing, but if it has lyrics either they need to be in a language I absolutely don't understand or I need to know them so well that I don't have a chance of getting hooked by the sense of them, in direct contrast to my otherwise default of tuning out whatever I hear in favor of whatever I am reading. I can't do the wallpaper media thing that so many people I know report with podcasts or even TV shows. If I am listening, I need to be just listening.