France to ban much outdoor smoking

Jun. 1st, 2025 03:00 pm
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[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

BBC News article here. I'm interested to see that, from 1st July, France will significantly extend its anti-smoking laws. It will become unlawful to smoke in a wide range of outdoor spaces frequented by children, including parks, beaches, near schools and at bus stops. Terrasses at cafés and bars will be exempt, and perhaps more significantly so will vaping. It's also very unclear how much the new laws will actually be enforced, and that's crucial to whether it makes much difference or is just showboating by the government. Even so, I'm a bit envious. The place that I hate to encounter smoking most is at bus stops, because it's the one outdoor space where I can't just move away. I'd ban that, with enforcement, tomorrow if I had the power.

Currently Into – June Edition 🌞

Jun. 1st, 2025 01:39 pm
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[personal profile] booksbardsandbaselines
 It’s the first of June, and I thought it’d be fun to kick off the month with a little round-up of what I’m currently into. Think of this as a warm cup of tea between friends, where I gush about the things that are bringing me joy, curiosity, or just a welcome distraction.

So, here we go:

🎾 Tennis, Always Tennis
The clay court season has completely taken over my brain (and calendar). I’m obsessively watching matches and refreshing scoreboards. Jannik Sinner’s footwork? Poetry. Jasmine Paolini is thriving, and Aryna Sabalenka’s fierce energy is unmatched. And honestly, Juan Carlos Ferrero and Simone Vagnozzi deserve awards for coach vibes alone.

📚 Reading: A Bit of Myth, A Lot of Curiosity
I’ve got a delightfully chaotic stack going right now:
The Incredible Human Journey by Alice Roberts is scratching that big-picture, deep-time itch.
The Midnight Library by Matt Haig is existential in a cozy way (how does he do that?).
A Bitter Remedy by Alis Hawkins is giving me dark academia vibes with bite.
– And I’m rereading Percy Jackson & The Lightning Thief because apparently I needed a dose of snarky demigod nostalgia. Zero regrets.

🎶 Music: Taylor Swift Era (Again!)
I’m celebrating Taylor Swift getting her masters back by revisiting Debut and Reputation—and wow, it’s been years. Listening to those albums feels like opening a time capsule. “Tim McGraw” still makes me emotional, and “Don’t Blame Me” hits so differently now. Honestly, this has turned into a full-on Swiftie renaissance.

🧠 ADHD Life
Timers, body doubling, and Pomodoro sessions are my current coping mechanisms of choice. I’m learning to honour my rhythms instead of battling them, and it feels like progress. Tiny systems, big difference.

🍝 Cooking
I made pasta from scratch and felt like I unlocked a new level of adulthood. Also, I’m firmly in my “add lemon to everything” era and have zero plans to stop.

🌱 In the Garden
Tomatoes! Everywhere! I planted three varieties and I think they’re planning a coup. The bees are loving the lavender, and I’m trying (and failing) to keep the mint from taking over the planet.

🎨 Little Joys
Journaling with stickers and washi tape, slow-art TikToks that make me want to paint something (but then I just... watch another TikTok), and writing blog posts with coffee in hand. It's the quiet rituals that are anchoring me lately.


That’s where I’m at. What about you? What are you currently into? Let’s swap obsessions 💫


Doctor Who season 2 (2025)

Jun. 1st, 2025 11:17 pm
fucktheg0ds: (Default)
[personal profile] fucktheg0ds
omg WHAT was that ending? What. What!

Read more... )

For my sanity I haven't paid much attention to Doctor Who fandom in recent years so I don't know what the general consensus of this season was, but I really liked it (apart from Read more... )). I thought season 1 was average with a few great episodes, but I enjoyed this season a lot more. Belinda seemed like such a normal, relatable character, without the tragic backstory that so many companions have. And Fifteen has grown on me (I wasn't used to sexy Doctor, I was used to awkward and reserved Doctor, but this season changed that).

I don't know what the future of the show is, but I'm still invested.

Icons — Galaxy Princess Zorana

May. 31st, 2025 10:48 pm
sheliak: Rachel Summers, fencing and looking gleeful. (Rachel: swashbuckle)
[personal profile] sheliak
The game's not out yet; it's in kickstarter. But it looks really fun—a gonzo space opera setting, elective monarchy politics IN SPACE—the creator's several kickstarted games have all apparently came out when she said they would, and I did like Long Live the Queen a lot. So! Excitement. And icons.

40 icons from promotional screenshots + trailer )

(no subject)

Jun. 1st, 2025 02:40 pm
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[personal profile] thawrecka
I went to see The Phoenician Scheme yesterday, and alas, it's a fizzler. The opening is so strong, that I was genuinely excited! I felt that I was in capable hands. Very Wes Anderson, but the music gave the opening a sense of urgency and Benicio del Toro's physicality brought a degree of menace to it that I genuinely don't expect from his work. And then... it turned out to be a stiff, surface-y lukewarm rehash of the sort of thing he's already done in The Royal Tennenbaums and The Life Aquatic & etc. etc. Shitty patriarch reconnecting with child, sets that make everything feel like a dollhouse, a bunch of celeb cameos, a bunch of monotone line delivery. The comedy doesn't land. Mia Threapleton's acting style is too casual and monotone, to the point that sometimes it feels like a humorous juxtaposition to everyone else's OTT acting and sometimes she just seems like a bad high school drama student. And this is on the higher end of orientialism for his films. This felt like maybe he's entering a Tim Burton-esque bad parody of himself era.

It's a shame, because I actually really enjoyed his last two films: to me they felt like he was using his style to do slightly different things and evolve, and while they were certainly more niche than his most popular, they had just as much heart. Asteroid City felt like it connected so well with lockdown grief, and The French Dispatch is such a charming blend of styles in what is blatantly a love letter to The Paris Review. But this felt like it was missing its heart, just going through the motions. And why would you waste a guy like Benicio del Toro on bad comedy.

It's not all bad - Richard Ayoade's bit as the leader of a humorous stylish freedom fighter/thief gang is delightful, and Riz Ahmed's bits reminded me that he's very good looking. And the beginning really is so good, stylish and urgent with a dark humour underlying. The afterlife segments scattered throughout the film are also a highlight for me, and they felt like that was where the real story was. Honestly, I felt like he could have done more with those and less with the wacky mid century basketball nonsense.

It kind of makes me want to see Anderson do a film about a character with genuine menace. If this had turned expectations on their head, and instead of being another unnecessary shitty patriarch becomes less shitty through reconnecting with adult children story had been about a villain who stayed a villain and didn't reform it all, it would have been a much better story. But this is more of a deflated balloon of a film.

I'm still going to watch the next one he makes though 😂

I also finally went to see Sinners last night. I'm sure everything that could be said about that film already has, and I'm not particularly qualified to say it, because I discovered while watching it that my hearing loss is worse than I thought because I couldn't understand a lot of the dialogue. I'd like to watch it again once it's on streaming and I can use subtitles. It's obviously in dialogue with other vampire films, along with everything else it's doing. Great sound design; I felt especially wrapped in the music, but the way it used sound as an auditory flashback overlaid over the present of the story was also a highlight. Charismatic actors. I was especially compelled by Wunmi Mosaku as Annie.

There were parts that didn't work as well for me - Michael B Jordan passing something to Michael B Jordan did not, in fact, look as convincing as I'd hoped. I can't tell how much it's fair for me to judge characters for doing dumb things in a horror movie, when people doing stupid things when scared is often the fun of the genre for me.

But really, I need to watch it again with subtitles to truly judge the film because I couldn't understand half the dialogue.

(no subject)

May. 31st, 2025 08:26 pm
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[personal profile] dustbunny105
I forgot I had plans with my sister and the kids today, lol. I thought it was next weekend. Ah, well.

Probably obvious that I didn't get my custom done but it's actually more because my attempts to fix the warped parts fell through. Didn't really accomplish anything but at least I didn't really make it worse either. Part of me feels like I could've done it if I had more knowledge/experience but I'm actually probably going about it the wrong way and don't have the right tools on hand. Looking over everything again now that I've not touched it in a hot minute, I think I can and should just fill in the gap areas with epoxy sculpt and paint over them. There are a couple issues I can use the heat from a hair drier to fix too. Disappointed but at least I'm learning!

Didn't get to the organizing I hoped to do but that was always a maybe for today anyhow. I've blocked out what I want to do tomorrow. Yes, I'm skipping finishing the custom first. The sculpting I need to do is too precise to do quickly and I don't want to spend all day on it. I'll just move my supplies out of the way to deal with later.

On a happier note, I am just about to finish that book I'm reading! And then I'll be keeping my fingers crossed re: picking up the pace on reading next month.

New acquisitions

Jun. 1st, 2025 02:46 am
igenlode: The pirate sloop 'Horizon' from "Treasures of the Indies" (Default)
[personal profile] igenlode
Oliver Reed's careless fencing )




On my second expedition I successfully managed to purchase a new slide buckle of the right size to fit my secondary clothes line, thanks to a very helpful Indian lady whose haberdashery stall turned out to be well-stocked with all sorts of components as well as the glittering sari fabrics and accessories. I tested it out this afternoon on a batch of washing, and it seems to function exactly as effectively as its predecessor (which is to say that it is no longer bar-taut after a few hours when you take the washing down again, but doesn't sag enough to cause a discernable problem while the weight is on it).


New cycle computer )

Documentaries in Russian )

What I *haven't* done, having been submerged in documentaries, or at least having had them playing in the background while engaged in other things, is actually finish watching "Twenty Years After", which I have already encountered 'spoilers' for in places ranging from TV Tropes (yes, the Soviet Musketeers have their own TV Tropes page...) to random Aramis fanvids and AU fan-fiction. Although I did, on my first (pedestrian) expedition to try to buy buckles, manage to start that third "Twenty Years After" Porthos-fic of my own...

Apart from anything else I got caught up in rereading the earlier parts of the book in the French version to see what else was missing in terms of detail, which turns out to include little scenes like the one in which d'Artagnan gives Raoul a fencing-lesson during his visit and praises Athos on the boy's swordsmanship (C’est déjà votre main, mon cher Athos, et si c’est votre sang-froid, je n’aurai que des compliments à lui faire) -- this entire conversation being omitted from the English edition, which cuts straight to Mazarin's recall message!

Lesbian Cinema Multivid

May. 31st, 2025 09:30 pm
blueshiftofdeath: Therese from Carol taking a photo (photo)
[personal profile] blueshiftofdeath

This premiered at Vidukon today!! I started it... omg, three years ago?! Crazy to think about! Deciding to submit it to Vidukon gave me a hard deadline finally to really finish it. Success!! :D

(password: "lesbian"; it's also on AO3 here.)

cut for a bunch of thoughts on making the vid )

delphi: An illustrated crow kicks a little ball of snow with a contemplative expression. (Default)
[personal profile] delphi
I spent the last two days playing Old Skies, the newest point-and-click adventure game from indie studio Wadjet Eye Games, and I ended up loving it!



You play as the employee of a time travel company in the 2060s who accompanies clients—wealthy people, or academics with grants—to the past for nostalgic or educational experiences. She is also often hired to change the past, within the company's algorithmically defined parameters for what can be changed while preserving the "important" parts of the present timeline. As a result of her job, the protagonist is one of the few people anchored in the timeline who is aware of the constantly flickering reality around her, in a world that's always rippling with the aftereffects of these commissions.

It's a way of living that the protagonist begins to have more questions about as some of the cases she's handling start to overlap with each other and with her personal life.

The game has a lot of elements that I tend to like in this studio's games, including many well-developed NPCs to meet, puzzles that are interestingly varied but not fiendishly challenging, a point of view to the story, and some clever mechanics. Wadjet Eye has always leaned toward having diverse casts of characters, but this is definitely the queerest game from them that I've played so far, which was a happy surprise.

My usual complaints about Wadjet Eye games persist on just two fronts: 1) the voice acting is generally great, but there's always one or two odd choices in the mix that sound jarring, and 2) they obviously care a lot about music when it comes to licensed or commissioned songs, but the background soundtrack often just loops around in ways that don't match what's going on in a scene. But those are obviously very minor issues, and this was overwhelmingly a well-made and thought-provoking game that I had a great time playing and couldn't put down once I'd started it.

A cat after my own heart

May. 31st, 2025 11:34 pm
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

Cat on bench, Bewdley, 31st May 2025
120/365: Sleepy kitty, Bewdley
Click for a larger, sharper image

I had a pretty quiet and uneventful Saturday, but that suited me just fine. It was a reasonably warm day (22 °C) and I'm not the sort of person who needs constant excitement in his life anyway. As such, the morning included a walk down to Sainsbury's to pick up a few bits and pieces -- yoghurt, lettuce, bread rolls, bathroom cleaner... -- and a reviving latte in St George's Hall. On my fairly slow way back up the hill I spotted this cat, whose name I don't know but who I've seen in the area a few times. Sadly I wasn't able to do the same as humans don't bend that way! I expect this cat was amused at the poor human doing all the work!

this will keep going until it can’t

May. 31st, 2025 10:38 am
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[personal profile] solarbird
J.K. Rowling announces that she will be using her private wealth from the Harry Potter series to develop the J.K. Rowling Women's Fund, an organization dedicated to removing transgender rights "in the workplace, in public life, and in protected female spaces"

A preview linking to this article in The Advocate. Here’s some quotes:

“I looked into all options and a private fund is the most efficient, streamlined way for me to do this,” she said. “Lots of people are offering to contribute, which I truly appreciate, but there are many other women’s rights orgs that could do with the money, so donate away, just not to me!”

It is not the first time Rowling has used her over $1 billion net worth to influence legal cases involving so-called women’s sex-based rights — a dog whistle used by herself and other anti-trans activists to exclude trans people from public spaces and reduce women to their genitals.

Note the “workplace” and “public life.” Note how it – as always – gets expanded. Note that it means everywhere outside your goddamn house.

For now.

Don’t worry, they’ll get there.

And the thing is…

The thing is…

The more she does this, and the more that people keep giving her money by supporting her work despite that, the more that other people of similar mindsets see that it’s safe to follow her example.

It shows her, it shows them, it shows everyone that they will not be punished for trying to persecute and terrorise trans people entirely out of existence. Eradication of trans people is polite politics. It’s respectable. It’s fine.

So if you – in the sense of an arbitrary person – support her work, you are not only confirming her thesis, you are encouraging others to join her and do the same.

This cycle will continue until it can’t because people finally stop handing these fascists their fucking money, which they absolutely will not fucking do.

But if and when that should finally happen, this will finally stop.

And not one minute before.

So the ball’s in your court, Potter fans. Frankly, after decades of watching straights throwing their money at anti-queer eradication activists my entire goddamn life, no matter how explicit and forthright they are about their genocidal aims, you know what? I’m not holding my breath.

But prove me wrong.

Please. Seriously. I’m actually begging you.

Prove me wrong.

Posted via Solarbird{y|z|yz}, Collected.

booksbardsandbaselines: (Default)
[personal profile] booksbardsandbaselines
 Well... here we are. First blog post!

Welcome to Books, Bards and Baseline - a corner of the internet where I plan to ramble joyfully about the things I love: books I can’t put down, myths I can’t stop thinking about, music that makes everything feel a little more magical, and tennis matches that make my heart race (and occasionally break).

My name’s Danielle. I’m curious, affectionate, and probably thinking about five things at once at any given moment (thank you, ADHD). I started this blog because I wanted a place to gather all my thoughts - the joyful ones, the nerdy ones, the slightly chaotic ones - and share them in case they resonate with someone else out there. If you’re the type to fall in love with fictional characters, yell at the TV during a Grand Slam final, or cry at a song lyric… hello, friend. You’re in good company.

You can expect a bit of everything here:

  • Mythology musings (Greek myths are my personal obsession)
  • Book thoughts and recommendation
  • Tennis rambles (Sabalenka, Sinner, and Paolini stans, I see you)
  • Playlists, journaling ideas, joyful chaos
  • Random reflections on life, love, and possibly bees

I don’t have a grand plan - just a lot of enthusiasm and a slightly overstuffed notes app. If this sounds like your cup of tea (or your courtside Aperol spritz), I’d love for you to stick around.

Thanks for being here. Let’s see where this goes ✨


Sonata in F You: Chapter 9

May. 31st, 2025 12:15 pm
autobotscoutriella: A closeup of Apollo Justice against a green background (AA4 Apollo 1)
[personal profile] autobotscoutriella
Sonata in F You
Chapter 9: cut the lights, close the blinds, and say goodnight
AO3

Summary: Two weeks after his brother's second trial, Klavier Gavin is arrested for murder.

Fandom: Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney
Characters: Klavier Gavin/Apollo Justice, Klavier Gavin/Daryan Crescend, Ema Skye, Miles Edgeworth
Rating: Teen
Warnings: Canon-typical violence, murder mystery, language
Notes: Title is from VOILA's "No Lullaby", also off the Daryan playlist.
Special thanks to [personal profile] crabkick for the midnight emergency beta (and the bookstore coffee shop for the extra caffeine) after I decided to rewrite a whole scene in this chapter at 5pm on Friday. I think it turned out pretty good.

chapter 9: cut the lights, close the blinds, and say goodnight )
igenlode: The pirate sloop 'Horizon' from "Treasures of the Indies" (Default)
[personal profile] igenlode
This is one of the few cases where a condensed adaptation works better than the original novel -- "Five Red Herrings" has always been one of Sayers' most tedious detective stories, and I found this dramatization a lot more successful than my last read of the novel. (I note that they do exactly as I suggested in my original review and simply don't attempt to hide the clue about the white paint; this really doesn't give away anything about the case (Wimsey contrives to watch all the suspects painting, but doesn't mention why until his exposition at the end), while making the plot device a lot less annoying!) Even the infamous string of rival theories at the end becomes magically non-boring once you've got actual people delivering them and enthusing over them.

I did miss the scene where Gowan is revealed to be completely ridiculous in appearance without his grandiose beard (Wimsey alludes to his potentially 'looking like a skinned rabbit' after being shaved, but the dramatisation doesn't mention that this isn't a mere allusion to the lack of hair, but to his unfortunate facial features). I wasn't aware of any other missing elements, and the audio background of cars, trains, wind etc. does a good job of setting the scene. I also enjoyed the selection of period tunes on the soundtrack, many of which I recognised!

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