David Hicks Wins 2025 Rotsler Award
(no subject)
I found only one box of balls. They are so old and fragile that even though they're plastic, they shatter like glass when they're dropped. The cat proved that to me. But I have small sets of angel ornaments to pop on. No cats have, as of yet, expressed interest in climbing the tree.
The overachieving neighbor has set up her outdoor lights. Winking and blinking at us.
The SEASON is officially opened.
Pixel Scroll 11/29/25 My Scroll Displays A General Pixel And You Claim It’s Cut To Your File. What A
Daily Check In.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 26
How are you doing?
I am okay
16 (61.5%)
I am not okay, but don't need help right now
10 (38.5%)
I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)
How many other humans are you living with?
I am living single
10 (38.5%)
One other person
10 (38.5%)
More than one other person
6 (23.1%)
Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
How is it almost December
This will probably be mostly Murderbot and Babylon 5 (also Biggles? is there any point to posting Biggles recs, in a fandom that small where everyone has probably read anything they're interested in already?). I've actually got a B5 question. I still hope to drag some of you into watching it with me if possible, but I don't want to spoil any potential watchers for major developments in the series, which is really best unspoiled (if you are inclined to enjoy things that way) and doing recs in this particular way is probably going to be spoilergeddon.
So I am curious if people care about this or not.
Would you like me to put Babylon 5 spoilers under a cut?
Yes please, that would be appreciated.
6 (21.4%)
I would prefer that you don't, so I can read everything without clicking a cut.
2 (7.1%)
No preference/answer too complex for your binary boxes.
20 (71.4%)
(Results are viewable only to me, so you're not committing yourself publicly to watching the show or anything. I would just like to know if there's any particular reason to be careful about spoiler-cuts or if it doesn't matter all that much at this point.)
And me? Well, I'm just the narrator
—Tom Stoppard, Arcadia (1993)
Unofficial Fandom 50: Terence Rattigan [3/50]
Who was Rattigan?
Terence Rattigan (1911-1977) was an English playwright and screenwriter, whose most famous works are The Browning Version (1948), The Winslow Boy (1946), The Deep Blue Sea (1952) & Separate Tables (1954). His works are usually sharply observed, low-key character pieces, mostly v middle-class background*, one of a combination of factors that caused him to fall from favour in the wake of Osborne's Look Back in Anger in the 50s. He wrote for (low-brow!) cinema, radio and TV too, another factor. Since the 90s in particular he's been recognised as one of the 20th C greats, via several major revivals of many of his works and you'd be hard pressed to find a year now when some major British theatre or other isn't putting on a Rattigan.
He was gay, which is evident in many of his plays, although usually more implicitly than explicitly - the most explicit use of a gay character, in Separate Tables, he censored himself prior to its Broadway performance. From 1998, though, happily, modern productions have usually restored the original version. The Browning Version isn't explicit, but is very much about queerness, too.
I came across him when my teacher gave us The Browning Version for A-Level, and instantly fell in love, even if it took me thirty-odd years to finally get up and try some of the rest of his plays. I think I was worried that they wouldn't be as good or would contain aspects that might spoil TBV for me - happily, as you can see, I needn't have worried!
What do I love about his works?
He's very much all about character pieces, especially small-scale, claustrophobic ones (which the theatre naturally tends towards), in a way that I really love.
His first success was the farce French Without Tears (1936), so between that and the screen-writing, he's a very easy watch, in the best sense - his dialogue says so much about character, and often still feels fresh, and he can do light comedy as well as the more serious pieces. You'll often find variations on mismatched marriages, moral choices, people from different positions finding understanding of each other, and trial by the media in one form or another. His characterisation is always well-rounded and complex.
The thing I love the most, though, is his characteristic trick of having so much of the mood or conclusion or character shift on a literal sixpence - one small item, or action, or change of point of view leads to an uplift of hope we didn't expect - and on rare occasions, the reverse, acting as the last spiteful straw. The gift of a book, the discovery of a letter, love of art - how big small things can be to us humans.
I'll talk about specific plays if I carry on with this meme, I'm sure, but I definitely think he's worth trying out if you haven't already. There are a range of adaptations around, new and old, (TV, film, Radio, some of which he wrote the screenplays for himself), as well as current theatre productions.
The National Theatre has a really nice little two-part intro to five of his major works (spoilery, though, as ever with these things) - I presume this means they have some Rattigans on their At Home service, too. If you wanted to try a live production, The Winslow Boy or The Browning Version are particularly good starting places.
(Warnings - not many! He's not a bleak writer at all as a rule, but suicide does crop up in various ways in After the Dance, The Deep Blue Sea, Cause Celebre, and Man and Boy; and In Praise of Love has a character with a terminal illness - leukaemia, which he had himself).
The last thing of his I watched was Heart to Heart, a 1962 BBC TV screenplay written to launch one of their anthologies - it deals again with mismatched marriages, trial by the media, and an attempt to do the right thing that isn't very successful, but at the end, the main character, learning that out of nearly 300 people who phoned into the TV station after a broadcast, 3 of them got the point: "That's something," he says. "They must be very interesting people."
How very Rattigan. ♥
* He attended Harrow, although wiki, if it is to be believed, says that while he was there, he was in its Officer Training Course and started a mutiny, which is brilliant if it's true. <3
I am so tired
I was awake again last night and spent hours (yes, it was literally hours) looking at shelving & bookcases online.
Himself & father-in-law are watching the rugby right now, and I am in my office.
I usually keep a little half-pint armchair in here, but that's gone to guest room so father-in-law has a comfy space for himself and can retreat into privacy.
So I have made myself a little nest with a duvet & a couple of pillows and here I am.
- accounting,
- cloud,
- dataprotection,
- disease,
- doom,
- economics,
- facebook,
- funny,
- goodnews,
- immune_system,
- law,
- links,
- mistake,
- movies,
- poverty,
- satire,
- switzerland,
- true,
- usa,
- viakenny
Interesting Links for 29-11-2025
- 1. Switzerland: Data Protection Officers Impose Broad Cloud Ban for Authorities
- (tags:Switzerland dataprotection cloud )
- 2. Credit Report Shows Meta Keeping $27 Billion Off Its Books Through Advanced Geometry
- (tags:satire law accounting Facebook true )
- 3. I think there's a teeny tiny error in the data here on the Bridget Jones movies
- (tags:movies mistake funny )
- 4. 'They don't have symptoms': CAR-T therapies send autoimmune diseases into remission
- (tags:immune_system disease GoodNews viaKenny )
- 5. How a Broken Benchmark Quietly Broke America (The level at which the US measures poverty is wrong)
- (tags:usa poverty economics doom )
Almost Cosy Mystery
Pixel Scroll 11/28/25 But I Was Just A Kid, Pixel Scrolled Out Long Before My Comments Ever Did
Me-and-media update
In the Making friends with chatbots poll, 66.1% of respondents hadn't used AI in the last seven days, as far as they were aware, and 8.9% had used it for work. A quarter of respondents had used it against their will. Once again, I'm left wondering how representative Dreamwidth denizens are. My people!
In ticky-boxes, alpine octopuses practising their yodelling came a distant second to hugs, 41.1% to 67.9%. Thank you for your votes!!
Reading
( Read more... )
Kdramas
( Read more... )
Other TV
( Read more... )
Audio entertainment
Tons of Tech Won't Save Us, which is really good. Argh, everything. /o\ Most of the available episodes of new Aotearoa NZ political podcast Cross Party Lines (in the vein of and inspired by The Rest is Politics), which is really good -- intelligent and informed, of course, and I appreciate that the right-wing representative has zero time for our current government. Writing Excuses. Letters from an American. One episode of Fansplaining. A couple of episodes of The Life Indigenous, and the start of an episode of The Tongue Unbroken: Language Revitalization & Decolonization.
Online life
Constantly running to keep up, partly because I haven't been around as much. | I need to not compare my Yuletide productivity with last year's -- finishing my assignment is enough! Anything else is jam. | The
Writing/making things
A few bits and pieces inspired by the Slo-Mo Rewatch, a few flashfics. It's time to roll up my sleeves and dig into my Yuletide fic: so far I have 360 words and a scene list. I'm in a reasonably good writing headspace, so I expect it to be fun
Life/health/mental state things
( Read more... )
Link dump
Ryan Coogler gives a speech at Chadwick Boseman's posthumous Hollywood Walk of Fame star ceremony (via
Good things
Meerkats and kangas and lemurs, oh my! Sunshine. TV. Dumplings. Biking. Yuletide and Guardian. Dreamwidth. Haircuts (I had 8 months' worth cut off, and when I stood up, there was a MOUNTAIN of clippings on the floor). Coloured pencils. Podcasts. Libraries.
Have you cancelled any subscriptions for political reasons, lately?
yes
13 (27.1%)
no, but I'm going to
0 (0.0%)
no, but I'm thinking about it
3 (6.2%)
no (too hard, don't have any, or other no)
25 (52.1%)
other
2 (4.2%)
grar at everything
17 (35.4%)
ticky-box full of hard copy media
19 (39.6%)
ticky-box full of instant gratification takes too long (Carrie Fisher)
18 (37.5%)
ticky-box full of lemurs locked together like lego pieces
15 (31.2%)
ticky-box full of the dishes are done!
14 (29.2%)
ticky-box full of fairies "helpfully" filling all your cups and mugs with snowdew and honeyflakes
15 (31.2%)
ticky-box full of hugs
33 (68.8%)
Dishes, Firefly
Had a nice ride on Firefly today. It was one of those priceless sunny, cool winter days. We worked on turns and her listening to my cues instead of worrying about where the other horses are. I worked on not dropping my shoulder to the inside. Firefly did great, she has stopped having panic attacks when I ask for something new. She walked pretty quietly even though it was clear she had a lot of extra energy. As usual I quit while I was ahead, got off, hung her saddle on the fence and turned her loose. She had a wonderful time tearing around the big arena at top speed, mane and tail flying. My old friend Alice called out and said "she's gorgeous!" Alice had only ever seen a rather sad little dirty pony standing in the corral. Firefly doesn't like to run in Winter Quarters because the ground is so rocky. After making several rounds of the arena and expressing herself with some loud snorts, she calmed down and stood at the gate on the far end of the arena. I sometimes let her out to graze there. When I didn't come over she walked the length of the arena (250 ft) and straight up to me. I think Alice though that because I haven't actually been riding Firefly much that I hadn't spent time with her. It was a nice moment.
Tonight is my last night of "horse duty". The four of us who have horses at Winter Quarters trade off feeding and moving the horses around. Someone is there two times a day all winter. Maddie and Lily both went out of town for Thanksgiving so Grace and I split up the shifts. I took both shifts for 3 days and have one more this weekend.
In less exciting news, I got a lot of paperwork cleaned up and some stuff off to the county. Also exchanged my new Ariat jacket. The one I had purchased had a tiny flaw in the zipper that made it hard to zip up. The stitching was a fraction too close. It is a nice canvas, padded jacket, meant to replace two sweaters I have worn, quite literally to tatters over the last decade and a half. If I'm going to wear this jacket for that long, the zipper better work!
Daily Check In.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 18
How are you doing?
I am okay
13 (72.2%)
I am not okay, but don't need help right now
5 (27.8%)
I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)
How many other humans are you living with?
I am living single
8 (44.4%)
One other person
8 (44.4%)
More than one other person
2 (11.1%)
Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
Weekend to-do list
- Slo-Mo Rewatch post ✅
- Yuletide assignment draft
- media update post (or, as I generally refer to it in my notebook: MUp) ✅
- attack email inbox/tabs
- First Aid flashfic (started) ✅
- draw something *struggles with the urge to disclaim this to the horizon and back* ✅
Already achieved: dishes;
Also, I took almost no zoo photos the other day (and none of the meerkats), but I did snap these.


Recent fanworks
Guardian
- Additions to the episode 4 interrogation of Shen Wei
- The Mouse and the Dragon, 1,559 words, G-rated, ep 4 missing scene, Guo Changcheng interrogates Shen Wei
- Going Fishing - 1,180 words, G-rated, ep 4 missing scene, Da Qing interrogates Shen Wei
- Analysis and Verification - 838 words, G-rated, ep 4 missing scene, Lin Jing and Wang Zheng stealth-interrogate Shen Wei
- Other things
- Bed of Purrs - Shen Wei/Zhao Yunlan & Da Qing, 2,565 words, T-rated, set in YOHE (Da Qing-centric)
- Reasons - 100 words, G-rated, ep 5 missing scene, Shen Wei POV on moving house
- not close enough - 300 words, G-rated, episode 6, Shen Wei timeloop feels
- Da Qing Works - fanart of Da Qing, riffing off the DreamWorks logo, G-rated
- Retreat - 734 words, G-rated, Da Qing, Wang Zheng, Sang Zan, random fluff with tiny crossover
Bon Appétit, Your Majesty
- Inventions, Invective, and Potential - 2,527 words, G-rated gen, Jang Chun-Saeng (medieval Korean inventor dude), spackle for the ending
A dead-end, and cape progress
It seems more and more people are leaving the virus that is FB, and the question is where to find community again. This blog suffers, because I do not believe this is where we will re-gather. Unfortunately.
Anyway, I've gotten some more progress on my laurel cape. I've finished the badges around the hems, and I've outlined the entire cape with a laurel wreath trim. I want to add more stuff to my cape, but I haven't actually finished my design, so I'm testing it out on the project live.
After trying a cold cord three ways I realized I have almost enough of the laurel trim to double up the outline around the whole cape. I am hoping Helwig might have another roll of that, or I will have to go back to the drawing board again.
I started to get some hope of finishing it enough to wear it at 12th Night Coronation, but, I think that's not quite realistic.
The applique and all the cord I am couching means I also want to add another layer of fabric on the inside before lining it with silk. The ends of the cordage I am couching is anchored on the backside, and I'm worried the ends might poke or snag on the silk if I do nothing. I am hoping that a single layer of cotton will be enough to stop that happening. I want to keep this cape as light as possible, though.