Amperslash Exchange reveals

Jan. 25th, 2026 07:22 pm
pauraque: Deanna smiles at Beverly (st beverly and deanna)
[personal profile] pauraque
After several delays, [personal profile] amperslashexchange has in fact revealed! This is a fest about ambiguous relationships that don't fit neatly into platonic or romantic categories. Somewhere back in the ancient days (seriously, it was over a month ago) I wrote two pinch hits:

A New Course (1890 words) by pauraque
Fandom: Star Trek: The Next Generation
Rating: General Audiences
Relationship: Beverly Crusher &/ Deanna Troi
Summary: Beverly knows what it's like to have a friend and want more. This is the first time she's ever wondered if she even knows what more means.

Five Things She Isn't (1295 words) by pauraque
Fandom: Star Trek: Voyager
Rating: General Audiences
Relationship: Kathryn Janeway &/ Seven of Nine
Summary: In her early days aboard Voyager, Seven of Nine does not know what Janeway is. She only knows what she isn't.


(I almost wrote a third pinch hit, but by the time I finished the second one, someone else had snagged it. Now the world will never know what sort of ambiguous relationship I was going to write for I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream. Which... might actually be for the best.)
musesfool: a glass of iced coffee with milk (nectar of the gods)
[personal profile] musesfool
I would guess we got about 7-8" of snow today before it either stopped or turned to rain (I'm not sure which), and my phone lit up with work chats because they did not make the choice to close the office and make everyone remote on Friday like they should have (in past years, these big forecasts have sometimes turned into duds in reality), so they had to do it today. I was wfh regardless, so it didn't matter to me.

I hope all of you in the path are safe and warm.

More delightfully, I also got pics of Baby Miss L in her Minnie Mouse snowsuit with big smiles on her face - and a video from earlier when she was all, "go in the snow, Mama!" and her mama was like, "We will, but not yet." But Baby Miss L insisted, "But snow, Mama!" Super cute! 🄰🄰🄰

I spent the whole weekend in pajamas, and today I finally tried out a couple of recipes I'd had my eye on for a while: vegan chocolate cupcakes (always useful to have) and whipped ganache (not vegan but delicious) (pics). The cupcakes are okay - a little spongier, texture-wise, than I like, so I'll probably stick with my preferred recipe unless I have a need for ones that are vegan - but the whipped ganache is delicious. It also has butter in it, which I haven't seen before - previously when I've whipped ganache, it's just been the chocolate/cream/vanilla version. As for the cupcakes, I made minis instead of standard, and I swapped in coffee for the water, but otherwise followed the recipe. I got 40 cupcakes out of it, and probably could have gotten a few more, but 40 was more than enough, since I am not taking them anywhere.

*

Snowflake Challenge 13: Community

Jan. 25th, 2026 05:43 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Bingo balls (bingo)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Snowflake Challenge 13: Community

We spend a lot of time in fandom talking about community, and we mean a lot of different things by it. And that’s okay! I’m always interested in what other people think about community in fandom, and especially – considering the online nature of so much of fandom -- what are the places and groups that create/allow/encourage that community. These could be flashfic or challenge communities that encourage fanwork creation, discords for talking about the latest episode of your favorite show, exchanges, promptfests, watch-alongs, live streams… whatever promotes community for you.

Today’s challenge:

TALK ABOUT A COMMUNITY SPACE YOU LIKE. It doesn’t need to be your favorite, or the one where you spend the most time (although it certainly can be). Maybe it’s even one that you’ve barely visited. But talk about that space and how it helps support fannish community
.


An old-fashioned ornament of two young girls bundled up in coats and walking side by side is nestled amidst pine boughs.

Read more... )

Post Deadline Pinch Hits

Jan. 25th, 2026 07:21 pm
maevedarcy: (nabrielise)
[personal profile] maevedarcy posting in [community profile] holly_poly
We have the following Pinch Hits looking for a loving home. See below for general details. More specific information can be found by clicking the links. All previous Pinch Hit posts are no longer being updated.

All current pinch hits are due by 11:00 AM UTC on 1 February 2026.

This year, we will do a pinch hitter treats sign-up post, so that anyone creating a pinch hit fanwork who is not signed up for the main exchange is able to potentially get a treat made for them - you can check this post for more info.

Before you start your assignment, please make sure to familiarise yourself with the exchanges rules, including fanwork minimums.


CLAIMED! #2: Riverdale (TV 2017), Glee (TV 2009), Person of Interest (TV)  )

CLAIMED! - #4: Dead by Daylight (Video Game), Borderlands (Video Games), Pocket Monsters: Black & White | Pokemon Black and White Versions  )

CLAIMED! - #7: Disco Elysium (Video Game), Final Fantasy VIII, The Locked Tomb Series | Gideon the Ninth Series - Tamsyn Muir  )

CLAIMED! - #17: Boku no Hero Academia | My Hero Academia (Anime & Manga), LEGO Ninjago (Cartoon 2011-2022), Miraculous Ladybug, Bungou Stray Dogs, Nanatsu no Taizai | The Seven Deadly Sins - Suzuki Nakaba (Anime & Manga) )

If you're interested in claiming any of these pinch hits, send an e-mail to holly.poly.exchange@gmail.com with your AO3 name or reply to this post. (Comments are screened.)

Collection
: https://ao3.org/collections/holly_poly_2025
Tag Set: https://archiveofourown.org/tag_sets/25541
Tumblr: https://holly-poly.tumblr.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/holly_poly_ex
Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/holly-poly.bsky.social
Google Groups - Holly Poly Updates: https://groups.google.com/g/holly-poly-updates
Google Groups - Holly Poly Pinchhits: https://groups.google.com/g/holly-poly-pinchhit

Reading: Nonfiction

Jan. 26th, 2026 08:44 am
lucymonster: (bookcuppa)
[personal profile] lucymonster
I've been in a bit of a reading slump lately, hence the sudden surge of more movies in a few weeks than I think I watched the whole of last year. But, feeling unable to commit to any new novel, I've been picking away at some interesting nonfiction:

Millennial Love by Olivia Petter is a collection of musings on love, sex and dating in the digital age. It is of absolutely no relevance to me personally, as a millennial who met her husband young, before either online dating or the concept of mobile phone apps in general had quite penetrated the mainstream, but reading it made me wonder how anyone manages to find a partner anymore now that Tinder et all have taken over the market. It sounds absolutely fucking nightmarish out there. The etiquette around read receipts and double texting and Instagram stories is positively Byzantine; I thought I knew how to use social media, but apparently, I really do not. And I think I might be happier that way. Still, this was a very heartfelt, emotionally open book that gave me some insight into what my younger/singler friends and family have been dealing with.

I did roll my eyes extremely hard at this bit:

I've heard the 'I'm shit with my phone' line so many times. Not just from Fuck Boys (see previous chapter) but from friends, too. It's only recently that I've realised it has absolutely nothing to do with being good or bad with your phone. In fact, this phrase is about arrogance. Sheer unadulterated arrogance that leads a person to believe their time is more valuable than someone else's.

Really, Olivia Petter? People not texting you back on your preferred schedule is "sheer unadulterated arrogance"? Come on. Phones are there to help us communicate when we want to, not to force us into a state of mandatory round-the-clock availability. No one thinks we should all be barging into each other's houses uninvited whenever we feel like asking a question or sharing a joke; how does owning a smartphone entitle you to a degree of control over your friends' social schedules that you wouldn't dream of demanding face to face? I plan to continue restricting my use of the device to when it bloody well suits me, and I give all my loved ones my full-throated blessing to do the same; if that puts the damper on friendships with people who see digital unavailability as "arrogance", so much the better for both of us.

I think, though, this is probably a good example of why the whole online dating world described in the book sounds so unbearable to me. I seem to have missed the cutoff for a generational shift that has embraced technology as core to our social lives rather than incidental. I can't imagine getting worked up about somebody texting me twice in a row or taking their time to respond to a non-urgent message, any more than I can imagine getting offended by a salesperson telling me "no problem" instead of "you're welcome"; my older friends would probably be equally baffled by the automatic pang of anxiety and hurt I feel when they end a short text with a period. Etiquette is always so culturally specific; impossible to grasp intuitively from the outside, and almost as hard to recognise as subjective from within.

Murder Under the Microscope by James Fraser is the memoir of a forensic scientist and a selection of the major UK criminal cases he worked on in his career. I've read books in this genre before that seemed to be largely about self-aggrandisement: look at all these important cases I've worked on, and how clever and brave I was in solving them. This is not one of those. Fraser is intensely critical of the whole criminal justice system, and especially of the police; he is less interested in recounting personal triumphs (in most of his case studies, the forensic work he did ended up being irrelevant, inconclusive or intractably problematic) than in debunking myths about the power of forensic evidence. He depicts a field rife with human error at every level, and so poorly understood by the related fields that employ it (ie the police and the courts) that even the highest-stakes investigations are vulnerable to being derailed by misunderstandings and power struggles. In places the writing dragged a bit (the Damilola Taylor case in particular was such a mess of different organisations interfering with each other's work that I kept losing track of who was who) and in other places it seemed at risk of devolving into a hit piece against the Met (Fraser really did not enjoy working with the Met) but overall I found it an interesting, enlightening examination of how what we see as "objective science" is still beholden both to the limits of human skill and accuracy, and to the foibles of the institutions producing it.

-

I've also recently read a couple of books about the historical Jesus and the Bible's contradictory positions on sex and marriage. They're both fact-based, not faith-based, but I'm popping them under a cut anyway for those who've already heard more than they care to about Christianity today.

First Century AD spoilers under the cut )

Done This Week

Jan. 25th, 2026 12:57 pm
scrubjayspeaks: hand holding pen over notebook (done this week)
[personal profile] scrubjayspeaks
At last, I am not on any extra medication. I’ve gone a whole two days and haven’t exploded yet, so that’s promising. I’m only intermittently and lightly coughing. I’m pretty sure I can mostly hear out of both ears. My sinuses no longer periodically attempt to assassinate me. Yaaaay... *tiniest, groggiest pompoms*

I am particularly grateful to be feeling marginally less sick, because work did everything it could to kill me off ahead of my vacation time. Friday, in particular, threw everything it could at me. On the plus side, I programmed a robot. I also wired a temporary three-phase power supply drop. That one was a bit harrowing, but I guess I can’t say I was in over my head, because I sure did supply power without setting anything on fire.

Also, the only rain we got all week occurred in the half hour in which I was up on the roof, trying to replace air filters. Because sure, obviously, why not?

Speaking of vacation, I am now on a week of it. By the gods, I better have some fun this week. I’ve had about as much petty unpleasantness as I can take for the month.

Lewisia: still on break

Day job: 46.25 hours, with early starts and late ends

Cooking: decided to wing it on my usual curry recipe and managed to brain crisis my way through it nearly to inedibility, chocolate-chocolate chip edible cookie dough

Reading: The Wonder Engine by T. Kingfisher (gnole cultural studies! fantasy industrial infrastructure! some other rather upsetting stuff! ...I really liked it), The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy: Quintessential Phase (continuing the BBC Radio productions, I found this one a bit frustrating to follow along with, though I found the whole sandwich shop bit oddly touching)

Watching: Revolutionary Girl Utena episodes 27 to 29 and halfway into 30, Sinners (spectacular, holy shit?!)

Listening: Midnight Signals by Starcadian (synthwave, with a surprising thread of disco, found by way of Dan on Game Grumps noting his death last year :/)

Playing: continuing to enjoy renewed interest in Animal Crossing, the gift that keeps on giving

Clock Mouse: 117 minutes of planning work
goddess47: Emu! (Default)
[personal profile] goddess47 posting in [community profile] sga_saturday


Title: Working on a Vague IDea
Author: [personal profile] goddess47
Character(s): John Sheppard, Rodney McKay
Pairing(s): John Sheppard/Rodney McKay
Rating: PG
Length: 370 words
Warnings: none

Notes:

Filling a bunch of prompts with one ficlet! Whee!

For [community profile] mcsheplets prompt #141 - itch

For [community profile] sweetandshort January 2026 Mini-Bingo
alonefantasy
honeyjumping


For [community profile] sga_saturday prompt #527-531 - tea

For Writer's Choice prompt #152 - save


Summary:

Rodney didn't always get to putter with his personal projects.


WOrking on a Vague Idea on AO3

bluapapilio: an emoji holding a heart that says love (love)
[personal profile] bluapapilio

Episode 11:
Sammy showing she's changed by socking it to Kon, that's my girl!

Darius and Kenji made up, I'm glad.

Kon kills one of the dinosaurs to make a point and try to make the kids give up.

Episode 12: All Kon's lackeys died and he got arrested after Darius's brother's group showed up lol I love how they arrived after everything was already settled. Like 'we're just here to pick you pick now I guess'.

The reunion scene made me cry. šŸ˜­šŸ˜­ā¤ļøļø

And the timeskip!! They've grown!!! Kenji was taken in by Darius's family! He's paying for the maintenance of the island and Ben is there with May and Bumpy for summer break! Sammy and Yaz are spending it together in Texas! Brooklynn isss investigating something? Apparently there's something to do with dinosaurs going on near Darius.

It makes me so happy to see them keeping in contact and all being happy, and I like their new looks although seeing Brooklynn with such short hair was a surprise. Her freckles are so cute. And Ben grew his hair out, it suits him!

I'm so excited to watch Jurassic World: Chaos Theory next, it takes place 6 years after this one apparently so they'll be young adults.

goddess47: Emu! (Default)
[personal profile] goddess47 posting in [community profile] sweetandshort


Title: Working on a Vague IDea
Author: [personal profile] goddess47
Character(s): John Sheppard, Rodney McKay
Pairing(s): John Sheppard/Rodney McKay
Rating: PG
Length: 370 words
Warnings: none

Notes:

Filling a bunch of prompts with one ficlet! Whee!

For [community profile] mcsheplets prompt #141 - itch

For [community profile] sweetandshort January 2026 Mini-Bingo (all 4 prompts in one ficlet!)
alonefantasy
honeyjumping


For [community profile] sga_saturday prompt #527-531 - tea

For Writer's Choice prompt #152 - save


Summary:

Rodney didn't always get to putter with his personal projects.


Working on a Vague Idea on AO3

movies

Jan. 25th, 2026 11:59 am
snickfic: text: a cup of tea makes everything better (tea)
[personal profile] snickfic
Impromptu (1991). Writer George Sand (Judy Davis) strives to avoid past lovers, romance the man of her dreams (Chopin, played by Hugh Grant), and find peace and quiet to write novels.

The movie's strongest point is its cast. I'd not seen Judy Davis before but absolutely fell in love with her here, and Bernadette Peters as the scheming one-time BFF is wonderful, at first charming and later pitiable. Emma Thompson has a smaller, purely comedic part as a duchess desperate to become a patron of the arts, and she's also delightful. There are also some male actors, and they were fine. (I know everyone loves Julian Sands, and he's very nice to look at, but I'm unpersuaded by his acting chops.)

Wikipedia calls this movie a "historical film," which conveniently saves anyone from having to identify the tone. Is it a comedy? A romance? A drama? Possibly all of the above? I enjoyed it for the actors and the discussion of the arts, and I'm interested to learn more about George Sand, but it felt like a movie that wasn't entirely sure what it wanted to be.

I was inspired to watch this because of [archiveofourown.org profile] sophiahelix's excellent Yuletide fic for it, which I enjoyed even more rereading after seeing the movie.

--

The Secret Agent (2025). A research scientist in 1970s Brazil is targeted by a corrupt capitalist and hides out under a false name while trying to get the documents for him and his son to flee the country.

My understanding of this movie going in was that it was a 70s-esque thriller, but a very slow burn. I guess that's not untrue, exactly, but "slow burn" is a bit optimistic tbh. I can appreciate the artistic craftsmanship on display here, and as a portrait of people going about their daily lives amidst pervasive corruption, it was very good. I also enjoyed the occasional cuts to the present day of two women transcribing cassette tapes recorded during the main action of the movie, and how that juxtaposition worked of tension in the past vs reconstructing the events fifty years later. OTOH, I found the left turn in narrative structure towards the end pretty unsatisfying.

Overall, I get what the movie was doing, and I think it did it well; I just wasn't into it.

--

The Testament of Ann Lee (2026). The Shakers were an off-shoot of the Quakers who, per the movie, were given to physical motion ("shaking") as a form of worship leading to religious ecstasy and who eventually adopted a doctrine of total abstinence. Amanda Seyfried stars as Ann Lee, the English prophet of the Shaker sect who leads them to America in the mid-1700s. Also it's kind of a musical?

I've seen people say that Robert Eggers's movie The Witch is a horror story from within a Puritan worldview, and I've never quite been able to wrap my head around that framing, but Testament of Ann Lee is 1000% a story about a fringe religious sect from the sect's POV. If you've ever wanted folk horror without the horror part, this movie is it. The script is heavily inspired by contemporary accounts of Lee by her followers, and the movie is entirely committed to that version of events, complete with visions and apparent miracles.

The movie is gorgeous, and so much of it is given over to the religious music and dance that in places it feels more like an experience than a narrative. It's more interested in conveying the emotional life of these characters than in strict realism, so some of it feels heightened in a way that I really liked, without trying to be deliberately distracting. So for example, at one point in one of the climactic musical sequences, an electric guitar comes in. That heightened approach makes the extensive musical worship sequences feel organic and necessary, which is why I hesitate to call the movie a musical in the conventional sense; the music and dancing is almost entirely diagetic, even if choreographed to a degree unlikely in real life.

If it's not apparent by now, I loved this. Beautifully shot, incredible integration of the worship sequences, Seyfried was incredible. It was great to see a movie where the weird prophet was a woman and yet the movie still treats her with utter seriousness. There were moments where I could have done with a bit more on-screen illustration of events that get relegated to voiceover, but it's a small quibble.

I found a quote from director Mona Fastvold that she initially struggled to find support for the project due to "zero interest" form the industry, to which I can only say, no shit. I honestly have no idea how this got made, but I'm so glad it did. I have never had a movie experience like this before.

Early Humans

Jan. 25th, 2026 01:39 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Ancient people carried a wild potato across the American Southwest

Ancient travelers carried a wild potato across the Southwest, shaping its future for thousands of years.

Long before farming took hold, ancient Indigenous peoples of the American Southwest were already shaping the future of a wild potato. New evidence shows that this small, hardy plant was deliberately carried across the Four Corners region more than 10,000 years ago, helping it spread far beyond its natural range
.

Read more... )

Bingo: Blackout

Jan. 25th, 2026 07:13 pm
tarlanx: Mark Chao lying on a white pillow (Actor - Mark Chao 2)
[personal profile] tarlanx posting in [community profile] comment_bingo
My card is HERE

LIST OF FANDOMS
ALIENS
Blade Trinity (Blade Movies)
Dead Like Me (TV)
Die Hard Movies
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
L'Oreal Time Engraver Commercials
Oklahoma! - Rodgers/Hammerstein
Pitch Black (2000)
Primeval (TV 2007)
Riddick Movies
Stargate Atlantis
Star Trek: TOS
Supernatural (TV)
The Devil Judge
The Guardian (2006)
The Magnificent Seven (TV)
The Old Guard (Movies)
The Untamed/MDZS
The Yin-Yang Master: Dream of Eternity
Under the Skin (TV)
Word of Honor (TV)

Tags needed:
Dead Like Me
Oklahoma! - Rodgers/Hammerstein (or fandom: theater)
The Devil Judge
 
duckprintspress: (Default)
[personal profile] duckprintspress
A graphic entitled Get to Know Into the Split by Tris Lawrence. In the center is a book covered, Twinned Book 3, showing two people standing side by side, from the back, as they look toward three gnarled old trees in a deeply shadowed forest. Around the image, arrows point to text. The text is. 1. dimension jumping; 2. dreams (and Dreams) have power); 3. friends and found family; 4. established mlm relationship (includes an mlm pride flag); 5. seeking a place of safety; 6. happy ending!; and 7. ...college coursework + saving the multiverse.

For the third and final book of the Twinned trilogy by Tris Lawrence, there’s a lot I can’t say because shhhh, spoilers! But here’s a taste of the tropes and events I thought y’all might like a sneak peek of.

Our Kickstarter campaign is funding the first-ever print edition of Into the Split. Become a backer and get the whole trilogy!

Only three days left to back! This campaign ends at 10:30 a.m. Eastern time on January 28th.


Birdfeeding

Jan. 25th, 2026 12:32 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
It snowed yesterday, probably about 4 inches.  The ground is covered.  The trees still have a little sticking to them, but this is light fluffy snow so most has already fallen off.  The temperature is frigid.

I haven't been out to feed the birds yet, but they're active.  I've seen a flock of sparrows, a flock of mourning doves, two starlings, and a downy woodpecker.

EDIT 1/25/26 -- I fed the birds.  I've seen a male and a female cardinal.

I put out water for the birds.

It's snowing slightly again.

EDIT 1/25/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

Snow is sifting down off and on, but the wind has picked up so it's drifting more in places.  Surprisingly the snowplow has already passed by at least once.  That usually doesn't happen until the day after the snow stops, because we're out in the country.

EDIT 1/25/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 1/25/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I am done for the night.

Check-In Post - Jan 25th 2026

Jan. 25th, 2026 06:29 pm
badly_knitted: (Get Knitted)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] get_knitted

Hello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.

Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?

There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.


This Week's Question: What are your crafting goals for 2026?


If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.

I now declare this Check-In OPEN!



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