July 13

Hyperpartisan Sites Masquerading as Local News

Across the United States, sites with dramatic partisan slants purport to be local and state news media as seen here. Left-leaning sites focus on state news, while hard-right sites are filling the gap created by the collapse of local newspapers. Many of the 450 sites on this list are operated by just 5 business entities. Is there a site like this near you? Check the map to find out.
posted by rednikki at 2:40 PM - 6 comments

College football’s leaders are answering the wrong questions

Ryan Nanni of the college football website Banner Society says, "The football part’s not safe until the college part is." [more inside]
posted by Etrigan at 8:57 AM - 19 comments

July 12

The Secret History of Washing Machines

Lee Maxwell, the owner of the most comprehensive collection of washing machines walks us through the overlooked history of this iconic appliance. He runs the Washing Machines Museum in Eaton, Colorado with over 1600 washing machines. Videos here.
posted by ShooBoo at 3:50 PM - 38 comments

Tired of the view out your windows?

Check out the view from a window in a random home somewhere else in the world.
posted by COD at 2:30 PM - 61 comments

Step 3: Add in a beautiful melody, but remember the random swells.

How to Sound Like Different Composers in 3 Steps (SLYT). Classical violinists Brett Yang and Eddy Chen of TwoSetViolin have fun with the musical tendencies of twelve composers. [more inside]
posted by spamandkimchi at 2:27 PM - 11 comments

Massive Attack call for global change in new EP Eutopia, and beyond

After posting cryptic images on Instagram (Meaww), Massive Attack recently released ‘Eutopia’, a new audio-visual EP featuring three different collaborations, recorded in three different cities during lockdown, with three different messages: Massive Attack x Young Fathers + Professor Guy Standing (CNBC), a co-founder of the Basic Income Earth Network (Wired.co.uk) and long-time proponent of Universal Basic Income (UBI) // Massive Attack x Saul Williams + Professor Gabriel Zucman (The Hill), inventor of the US “Wealth Tax” policy (Ekathimerini) // Massive Attack x Algiers + Christiana Figueres, head of the UN climate change convention when the Paris agreement was achieved in 2015 (The Guardian). [more inside]
posted by filthy light thief at 2:10 PM - 5 comments

Falling Hard

We don't know how to navigate parasocial relationships. (SLMedium) Are you, or someone you love, a member of a fandom? More specifically, a fandom of a personality on the Internet? Then you're part of a parasocial relationship -- a relationship that involves an audience. And chances are, at one point or another, that person you follow, who may hold more power over you than you realize, will fall. It's happened before, as it did with podcaster Alastair Stephens, and it will happen again. Here's some advice on recognizing the potential problems and establishing boundaries to to protect yourself. (CW: talk of sexual and other misconduct.)
posted by lhauser at 12:09 PM - 25 comments

You see the sign? Well can you read it??

There are a lot of old corporate training videos on Youtube, but only one stars Joan, the demon checkout clerk of Elmhurst, Illinois.
posted by theodolite at 10:57 AM - 43 comments

He noticed strange creatures emerging from the sheet music

A Dangerous and Evil Piano Piece - "In the years that followed its début, [Erik Satie's] 'Vexations' outgrew its status as a curiosity. It became a rite of passage." (previously: 1, 2)
posted by kliuless at 9:56 AM - 18 comments

Ultra-Extreme Intensity, Low Excitement

Bohemian Rhapsody | A Synchronized Roller Coaster (via Kotaku)
posted by Etrigan at 8:45 AM - 11 comments

The Day After Terrorized 100 Million Viewers With Vision of Nuclear War

What they watched didn't really qualify as entertainment; Meyer stated he had no desire to make a "good" movie but a deeply affecting public service announcement. "It has Lawrence, Kansas, wiped out in a nuclear war with Russia. It is powerfully done—all $7 mil. worth. It’s very effective & left me greatly depressed. ... My own reaction was one of our having to do all we can to have a deterrent and to see there is never a nuclear war." Ronald Reagan, writing in his journal, having seen the movie before it aired on ABC. [more inside]
posted by dancestoblue at 7:15 AM - 125 comments

Heart - Heart

1985 was a ridiculously strong year for music. This past week, we missed the July 6, 1985 release of Heart's first album for Capitol Records, Heart [YT playlist]. It was the band's biggest hit album release, eventually being certified quadruple platinum in sales. Side A: If Looks Could Kill, What About Love [video], Never [video], These Dreams [video], The Wolf [more inside]
posted by hippybear at 7:09 AM - 30 comments

Interested in Mechanical Automation?

Ever wonder how we made all these crazy machines do all their crazy machine things before computers came along? Wonder no more as Alec (AKA, Mr. Connectify) from “Technology Connections” explore the inner workings of a Wurlitzer 3400 series jukebox from 1970. (23 min long YT vid).
Found via a post of an open side view of an antique calculator from here
His Youtube channel
A second channel
posted by growabrain at 5:04 AM - 15 comments

July 11

Bobby Banas and The Nitty Gritty

On the Judy Garland show (1964), six dancers do their thing to Shirley Ellis's The The Nitty Gritty (gif) (longer version). One is Bobby Banas, who would dance in West Side Story, appear in Mary Poppins and Down and Out in Beverley Hills, dance The Leopard in Get Smart, would kiss Marilyn Monroe, and dance again to Bill Haley and his Comets.
posted by Wordshore at 2:41 PM - 15 comments

Precious

A stranger than fiction Roman ring mystery thread. In which a golden signet ring portraying the Goddess Venus and belonging to one Silvianus is (allegedly) stolen by one Senicianus, a curse tablet to that effect deposited at the Temple of Nodens, and the ring subsequently lost and found again, possibly inspiring one of the greatest tales of all time.
posted by heatherlogan at 1:42 PM - 19 comments

UNESCO World Heritage Site

Turkey turning Hagia Sophia back into mosque Hagia Sophia was built as a cathedral in the Christian Byzantine Empire and was converted into a mosque after the Ottoman Empire conquered Constantinople in 1453 and changed the city's name to Istanbul.
posted by TRAJAN at 1:40 PM - 33 comments

All you ever wanted to know about guitars, with Steve Earle

In lockdown at his home in Tennessee, Steve Earle, the original hardcore troubadour, tells us about his guitar collection. This is a series of short, YT videos by Steve Earle where he picks a guitar from his collection to tell us about, he rambles a bit about stuff and sings a song which highlights the properties of the particular guitar he's chosen to showcase. His occasional failure to switch between cameras is endearingly incompetent, but the man sure knows his gee-tars. [more inside]
posted by essexjan at 1:18 PM - 11 comments

For sale: Scottish isle with old house, wallabies included

You can own your own Scottish isle for £500,000 — the price of a London flat (House Beautiful). Specifically, Inchconnachan Island (Google maps) in Loch Lomond, 40 km (25 miles) northwest of Glasgow. That price includes permits to replace the derelict 1920s timber bungalow (Forbes) with a 5-bed lodge house, boathouse and pier, but residency is limited to 60 days per year. Also, your neighbors will be feral wallabies (Atlas Obscura). [Via Mltshp, and an article from The Guardian]
posted by filthy light thief at 12:22 PM - 27 comments

UK Digital Festival of Archaeology

The UK's week of online celebrations of archaeology starts today. [more inside]
posted by paduasoy at 11:48 AM - 1 comment

My dear, sweet child, that's what I do. It's what I live for.

Julie Murphy on how the Little Mermaid’s Ursula is her ‘Revenge Body’ icon. "The revenge-body trope asserts that for a fat woman to avenge herself and to prove to her bullies once and for all that they were wrong about her, she must lose weight. Only then will her vengeance be fully realized. Essentially, the fat woman must become something she is not in order to prove that she was worthy all along. With her tentacles, back rolls, and red lips, Ursula isn’t waiting for a revenge body. She already has one." [more inside]
posted by spamandkimchi at 10:10 AM - 13 comments

Scenes from hell, written on the darkest pages of human history

Over a number of days in July 1995 Bosnian Serb forces systematically murdered around 8,000 Bosniak (Bosnian Muslim) men and boys.
Even as remains continue to be identified, denialism is moving from far-right fringe into mainstream . It is time to fight back against Bosnian Genocide denial.
Bosnian Muslims feel shunned by Europe. AlJazeera spoke with some survivors.
Srebrenica ~ Genocide in eight acts. (TRIGGER WARNING). A brief encapsule.
posted by adamvasco at 7:49 AM - 21 comments

Hot Tires… Hot Burgers!

Bigtop Burger is a clown-themed food truck. These are their adventures. Stove Elk Kid Zomburger [more inside]
posted by rodlymight at 6:50 AM - 5 comments

"we hold the government to its word"

In a momentous decision, the Supreme Court has ruled 5-4 that about half of the state of Oklahoma is "Indian country", jurisdictionally within a Native American reservation, and thus that the state must honor the treaties which set aside this land for Native peoples, last establishing Creek Nation boundaries in 1866. [more inside]
posted by progosk at 1:53 AM - 36 comments

Interview with maker Laura Kampf

[Festool] German maker, designer and YouTuber Laura Kampf delights half a million fans all over the world on YouTube with her unique and individual creations, which all follow the same motto: "The process is the product". There is a new video every week – and a new project to marvel at on YouTube and Instagram. Laura Kampf previously on Mefi.
posted by ellieBOA at 1:35 AM - 14 comments

Angry, educated and rich

Intra-Elite Competition: A Key Concept for Understanding the Dynamics of Complex Societies - "Elites are a small proportion of the population (on the order of 1 percent) who concentrate social power in their hands."[1] (via; previously) [more inside]
posted by kliuless at 1:11 AM - 16 comments

July 10

Two Cats and 500 Balls in a Ball Pit !!

“I surprised my two cats with a huge ball pit filled with 500 multi-colored balls!”
posted by brook horse at 8:47 PM - 40 comments

Listen with me if you want to live

Really, it all depends on how you like your soundtrack album for 1984's The Terminator. The original (rather limited run) release was 35 minutes long (YouTube album link, not a playlist) and was half score and half weak 80s pop. The 1994 "Definitive Edition" (Definite Edition?) (YT album link) was entirely the score, and runs about 72 minutes.
posted by hippybear at 8:25 PM - 8 comments

HIDEY HEY ...

Come on – baby, don't you want to go? (SLYT) [more inside]
posted by metabaroque at 7:57 PM - 8 comments

"My muse is not a horse"

Nick Cave on his nomination for MTV's Best Male Artist (SLYT)
posted by dfm500 at 6:34 PM - 13 comments

Cooking with a Cheiranthus cheiri

Hi!Welcome to my site! My name is Andrea, and I'm a registered dental hygienist, living in the San Francisco Bay Area. I have a major obsession with food as you can probably already guess. Stay, browse, and I hope you'll find something you'll want to try. [more inside]
posted by Johnny Wallflower at 3:10 PM - 11 comments

devotees say it takes 12 minutes to shake, but most agree 3-4 is enough

A "fizz" is a mixed drink variation on the older sours family of cocktail. Its defining features are an acidic juice (such as lemon or lime) and carbonated water. There are a few variations on this recipe: Gin fizz, Sloe gin fizz (purple fizz). Here's a bit more about the history of the Ramos gin fizz, and here's how to make one. [more inside]
posted by Fizz at 1:21 PM - 49 comments

How Nandini Jammi flipped the script on the founder of Sleeping Giants

"I’m leaving Sleeping Giants, but not because I want to. ... I want to show you how a woman of color almost disappeared from the movement she built, and what you can achieve when you refuse to follow the rules your white male “leader” sets for you," she writes in her Medium post that details how co-founder Matt Rivitz denied her the title of "co-founder", refused to create an email address for her, left her out of meetings, campaigns, and even award ceremonies. At her lowest point, she wanted to quit. But in a stunning strategic move, she took control of her own brand instead. [more inside]
posted by MiraK at 12:41 PM - 33 comments

if you cover something up, you create a sense of desire

Does Wearing a Mask Make You Look Hot? (GQ): A semi-scientific investigation.
posted by not_the_water at 11:54 AM - 53 comments

How to reopen schools safely

Many schools have been shut down to limit the spread of the Covid-19 pandemic, forcing parents to quit their jobs (if they work outside the home), or to juggle child care and distance learning while working from home. How can schools be reopened safely? Eight Steps to Reopen Schools, by a former CDC head and two former US secretaries of education. [more inside]
posted by russilwvong at 11:32 AM - 92 comments

[Before Carol] People Were Making Change Out of Tackle Boxes

"I think Carol was probably the second-best marketer in the history of the business, behind only Stan Lee. Carol's greatest strength in being in charge of the then-nascent direct sales department was in building up and stabilizing the retailers." An oral history of Carol Kalish, who made an indelible impact on the comics industry as Marvel's Direct Sales Manager in the 1980s. [more inside]
posted by Alvy Ampersand at 11:28 AM - 10 comments

Talking Science

The Royal Institution in London has been hosting a series of science lectures. The next two deal with quantum mechanics and space weather respectively. In September it will be the science of fireworks. The lectures, held in the Institution's venerable lecture hall regularly sold out pre-pandemic. These online lectures are donate-what-you-can. Previous lectures covered the mathematics of gambling, black holes, superconductors, the neuroscience of consciousness, science & racism, body illusions, the myth of magenta..... [more inside]
posted by storybored at 9:46 AM - 7 comments

"Failure to disperse"

"After an hour in a holding cell, the handcuffs still on, somebody again put leg irons around my ankles, and connected the two with a piece of chain pulled tight around my stomach." UK newspaper The Independent’s Chief US Correspondent Andrew Buncombe describes what happened to a journalist covering the shutdown of Seattle's CHOP protest. [more inside]
posted by splitpeasoup at 9:45 AM - 12 comments

Today, the Yaqui catfish...is functionally extinct in the United States.

"The only catfish native to the Western U.S. is running out of water - The Yaqui catfish was going extinct. Then came the border wall." More than just an article about an endangered fish, the piece goes into the complicated ties between colonialism, resource exploitation, international borders, tribal rights, and climate change. Single link High Country News. They allow 4 free articles a month for non-subscribers.
posted by primalux at 8:59 AM - 2 comments

The Outbreak of Euphoria is as Sudden as it is Unexpected

According to the BBC, "pop music is getting faster (and happier)." [SL BBC, evidence is from the UK pop charts]
posted by chavenet at 8:57 AM - 6 comments

MARMOSET KNOCK YOU OUT

MARMOSET KNOCK YOU OUT [more inside]
posted by springo at 8:12 AM - 19 comments

Metal, Meat, and Bone

Infamous anonymous music collective, The Residents, have released their 47th (or so) album, Metal, Meat, and Bone: The Songs of Dyin' Dog. The album is a collection of re-interpretations of blues songs by little-known Louisiana blues musician Alvin Snow, AKA Dyin' Dog, who had a connection with the group from their early days in Shreeveport... or, is it? [more inside]
posted by SansPoint at 8:07 AM - 4 comments

It's just a silly name that I came up with on the bus!

Despite its tagline of "A Heartless Card Game", Abandon All Artichokes is a cute game with a twist on the deck-building mechanic -- you are given a pile of 10 artichoke cards, and the winner is the first player to draw a five-card hand with no remaining 'chokes. Game designer Emma Larkins takes us through the entire process of creating the game, from idly writing down goofy titles on the bus to getting a shout-out as a "brilliant game" [Forbes] at the New York Toy Fair.
posted by Etrigan at 7:55 AM - 7 comments

July 9

You should've been downtown

Last month Anderson .Paak released a new video / single, "Lockdown" (directed by Dave Meyers). "Set against an easy-rolling funk groove characteristic of the artist's summery sound, the song relates .Paak's own experiences attending recent protests and voices his belief in the righteous motivations behind them."
posted by joseph_elmhurst at 10:58 PM - 5 comments

Renata Flores' Quechua covers and original Quechua + trap songs

"¿Qué motiva a una joven de 17 años a cantar en su idioma ancestral? Renata Flores, cantante, compositora y activista del idioma quechua revaloriza y promueve la lengua natal de sus antepasados a través de la música, mezclando sonidos andinos con géneros modernos." Quien Soy (Who I am) is a short Spanish documentary about Renata Flores, who started singing in Quechua covers, first House of the Rising Sun (original; subtitled) and went viral with The Way You Make Me Feel, and now blends other styles like trap and electric/dance to promote Quechua while also bringing attention to issues of femicide and the treatment of rural people. Renata Flores Brought Quechua to YouTube, and Then Everything Changed (Vice) [more inside]
posted by filthy light thief at 10:00 PM - 13 comments

It's not entirely show tunes, but nearly....

However it was that you first learned about Mandy Patinkin, you might not know that he recorded a really great album in the late 80s. Appropriately titled "Mandy Patinkin", it was released in 1989. The YouTube playlist unfortunately does not preserve the nature of the medleys on the album, but it's still an amazing listen. [more inside]
posted by hippybear at 8:21 PM - 32 comments

Polynesians and Native Americans met 800 years ago

Native South Americans were early inhabitants of Polynesia "DNA analysis of Polynesians and Native South Americans has revealed an ancient genetic signature that resolves a long-running debate over Polynesian origins and early contacts between the two populations."
posted by dhruva at 8:04 PM - 39 comments

State of Grace

In the video series State of Grace, Grace Baldridge explores the lives of LGBTQ+ people in celebrity-endorsed megachurches, the contemporary Christian music industry, and the reception of trans people in the church.
posted by clawsoon at 5:57 PM - 3 comments

“People didn’t need neighbors anymore … now they had money“

Most people now described themselves as Falkland Islanders first and British second, but it was hard to say what that meant. Britishness was easy to proclaim—the Union Jacks, the red post boxes. Symbols were enough because everybody knew what Britain was, and there was too much of it to capture, anyway. But what a Falkland Islander was, was harder to describe.
How Prosperity Transformed the Falklands by Larissa MacFarquhar, with photos by Maroesjka Lavigne.
posted by Kattullus at 4:50 PM - 8 comments

is cool with it if you turn it into a /p/ /b/ /v/ /ʋ/ /ɸ/ or /β/

the zodiac as IPA symbols. nerdy silliness from writer S. Qiouyi Lu
posted by spamandkimchi at 1:00 PM - 25 comments

Privilege.

The all-white country band formerly known as Lady Antebellum has filed a lawsuit to use the name Lady A, which Black Seattle blues, funk and gospel singer Anita White has used for more than 20 years. [more inside]
posted by heatherlogan at 12:45 PM - 143 comments

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