Posts Tagged ‘Trump’
Carefully Curated Spring Break Links! Definitely Not Too Many!
- SFFTV 15.1! SFRA Review 52.1! And some upcoming projects: a special issue of SFFTV on disability! Uneven Futures!
- Syllabus for Film Theory: Disability & Technology.
- CFP: Anticolonialism as Theory Symposium. CFP: Popular Fiction. The FIYAH Literary Magazine Grant Series is intended to assist Black writers of speculative fiction in defraying costs associated with honing their craft.
- A great piece from Adam Kotsko on having to come to terms with the unfortunate late work of a great thinker who helped shape his career.
- “Lena” is a true story. You knew it was when you read it.
- 40 useful concepts you should know.
- Drawing blood: notes on Maus. The real reason some people are so afraid of ‘Maus.’ Why Maus Opened the Door to Comics as Literature in Schools.
In light of a Tennessee district banning MAUS, I'm sharing the greatest two pages ever written and drawn about the importance of children's literature and protecting children's access to books, starring Art Spiegelman and Maurice Sendak. From the New Yorker, September 27, 1997. pic.twitter.com/hC2jyHicPN
— andrewkarre (@andrewkarre) January 27, 2022
Why, I say, oh why, is it so hard to simply serve the concept and write the adventures of a smart, creative and kind-hearted teenage girl with superpowers? What purpose earthly or unearthly is served by making this character an embittered space tyrant?
… I questioned the desire to attribute the worst aspects of human behaviour to characters whose only useful function, as I see it, aside from simply entertaining young people and anyone else who fancies an uplifting holiday in a storybook world far from the grinding monotony of pessimism and disillusion, is to provide a primary-coloured cartoon taste of how we all might be if we had the wit and the will and the self-sacrifice it takes to privilege our best selves and loftiest aspirations over our base instincts. While that great day is unlikely to happen any time soon in any halfway familiar real world, why not let comic book universes be playgrounds for the kind of utopian impulses that have in the past brought out the best in us?
- Batman Swallowing His Own Cape: The Modern Caped Crusader’s Narrative Autocannibalism.
- Comixology was basically perfect for what it wanted to be, so of course Amazon trashed it.
- Head of security at FSU’s Strozier Library charged with theft of thousands of rare comics.
- Mysteries of free speech: ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill: Florida Senate passes controversial LGBTQ school measure. Florida school district cancels professor’s civil rights lecture over critical race theory concerns. Wisconsin Republicans advance bills that would let 18-year-olds carry concealed weapons at school. Wisconsin GOP votes to limit race theory at UW schools. Republican lawmakers plan legislation to break up MPS, expand vouchers to all students in a proposal to overhaul K-12 education. North Carolina superintendent abruptly removes MLK-themed novel from 10th grade class. Idaho librarians could face jail time for lending “harmful” books.
- This Is the End of Affirmative Action.
- What Happens to Middle School Kids When You Teach Them About Slavery? Here’s a Vivid Example.
- The University Crisis: Does the pandemic mark a breaking point? College Endowments Saw Stellar Returns as the Market Soared. Academic Freedom and Tenure: University System of Georgia. What the heck is going on in Georgia higher ed? Tenure Without Teeth. Grotesque Inequity. Public education is facing a crisis of epic proportions.
- The Overbuilt Campus.
I’ve been in college continually since 1998 (now in 36th grade) and I think it’s hard for anyone who hasn’t been similarly present to comprehend just how much worse the student experience has gotten since the 90s https://t.co/ZkXX5XXnRf
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 22, 2022
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 4, 2022
- Mold, radon in FSU building tied to eight cancer cases in faculty report.
- Cripping the Neoliberal University – We need a Politics of Care.
- The Academic Conference Will Never Be the Same.
- The Power of Recognizing Higher Ed Faculty as Working-Class.
- U.S. Has Far Higher Covid Death Rate Than Other Wealthy Countries. What Do Masks Do to Kids? It’s ‘Alarming’: Children Are Severely Behind in Reading.
- New MAGA Emails Reveal Plot to Hand Arizona to Trump. ‘The Dark, Forgotten Carnival.’ Jan. 6 committee says Trump violated multiple laws in effort to overturn election. Criminal Charges Against Trump Just Became Way More Real. Trump considered blanket pardons for Jan. 6 rioters before he left office.
- Detroit overtaxed homeowners $600M. Years later, advocates still seeking reparations. Police in this tiny Alabama town suck drivers into legal ‘black hole.’
- ‘Shadow pandemic’: Advocates worry lockdowns have fuelled surge in partner violence.
- The school shooting generation grows up.
- How Being Bullied Affects Your Adulthood.
- Can giving parents cash help with babies’ brain development?
- I’ve always wondered about this: Texas trampoline parks aren’t regulated or inspected. We found 494 injuries in DFW region.
- Can Science Fiction Wake Us Up to Climate Reality? In a First, Alaska’s Arctic Waters Appear Poised for Dangerous Algal Blooms. US military faces crisis in Hawaii after leak poisons water. This 1882 surveying error saved a patch of forest from logging. IPCC issues ‘bleakest warning yet’ on impacts of climate breakdown. Carbon dioxide will have to be removed from air to achieve 1.5C, says report. How to Repair the Planet. Life in a ‘degrowth’ economy, and why you might actually enjoy it.
the problem in a nutshell pic.twitter.com/B3zDH15jI3
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) January 28, 2022
I have been exploring the work of Nukina Shunichi, a 19th century Samurai turned scifi writer recommended to me by one of my undergrads.
— Sunny Singh (@ProfSunnySingh) February 3, 2022
Why don't we have this writer on more syllabuses? He's completely overturned my view of the development of SFF.https://t.co/eAVuFrlQyk
- Climate Change Lurking Behind Every Corner: Review of Mark Bould’s The Anthropocene Unconscious.
- From ‘Dune’ to climate change, UChicago scholar draws from unique experiences in new course.
- The Death of Philip K. Dick Brought to Life.
- The Octavia Butler Novel for Our Times. Not that one. Not that one either.
- Ada Palmer and the Weird Hand of Progress.
- I should teach this again: The Sci-Fi Crime Novel That’s a Parable of American Society.
- Defamiliarising Capitalism Through Speculative Fiction.
- Disney Censors Same-Sex Affection in Pixar Films, According to Letter From Employees.
- Enough people purchased a chemical on Amazon to attempt suicide that the company’s algorithm began suggesting other products that customers frequently bought along with it to aid in such efforts. Amazon has continued to sell the product.
- Bionic Eye Patients Are Going Blind Again After Manufacturer Decides They’re Obsolete.
- PSA: Renting From Hertz May Get You Arrested. For real: If you’ve rented a car from Hertz, there could be a warrant out for your arrest.
- He Donated His Kidney and Received a $13,064 Bill in Return.
- And on the pedestal these words appear: After Burning for Days, a Ship Carrying Thousands of Luxury Cars Sinks.
- Against the Contemporary American Essay.
- What is Love in African Fiction?
I think it’s bad for knowledge production that once a term reaches a certain level of obvious importance (like “Anthropocene”) it suddenly becomes “boring.”
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) January 31, 2022
- Adrift, Broke, and Disillusioned: How a struggling bartender became the face of a resurgent left.
- Biden’s signature legislation expired. Recipients are wondering: WTF happened? The devastating effects of losing the child tax credit.
- Household debt jumped by $1 trillion in 2021, the most since 2007. Inflation rose 7.9% in February, as food and energy costs push prices to highest in more than 40 years. Rents reach ‘insane’ levels across US with no end in sight. Emergency Workplace Organizing Committee Is Helping Workers During COVID. As inflation heats up, 64% of Americans are now living paycheck to paycheck.
I think Democrats were more or less certain to get slammed in the midterms no matter what they did — the real problem is that this window was their only opportunity to get anything done for the next decade and (just like in 2009) they blew it
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 18, 2022
One US Senator “heard stories” about people allegedly using the Child Tax Credit “for drugs” without any evidence or data to back it up.
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) February 18, 2022
He then used that as justification to nuke the entire national program, causing millions of kids to fall into poverty in weeks. Horrifying https://t.co/kOyuFp6ig4
- A Rhodes scholar barista and the fight to unionize Starbucks.
- Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine: An Explainer. ‘This is a fossil fuel war’: Ukraine’s top climate scientist speaks out. How Ukraine could become a nuclear crisis. Russian bombs. Why It’s Important To Debate Foreign Policy Even In Times Of Conflict.
- You don’t exist. I’ve been saying it for years!
I’ve said it before but I think it’s at least plausible that contemporary history seems so bizarre because there’s only a handful of universes where humanity didn’t go extinct during the Cold War https://t.co/CMjcSFlbEE
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 28, 2022
If you’d told me then that the late 90s were just about as good as things were going to get, man, I’d have had a lot of questions
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) January 28, 2022
- No human has beaten a computer in a chess tournament in 15 years.
- Star Wars: You know, for kids.
- ‘The history of fantasy is racialized’: Lord of the Rings series sparks debate over race.
- Villeneuve’s “Dune”: Blending Spectacle and Cultural Erasure.
- Star Trek 2023 Movie To Reunite Kelvin Crew, Production Set To Start By End Of Year. What Happened to Tarantino’s ‘Star Trek’ Film? Every Detail About His Canceled Pitch. Star Trek: Picard’s narrow tightrope.
- Futurama is back, again, again.
- Five years on, Breath of the Wild’s open world is still unmatched.
- “It Was Horrible”: Inside Charlize Theron and Tom Hardy’s Mad Max Feud.
- Back to the Future: The Musical.
- Cult Classic ‘Fight Club’ Gets a Very Different Ending in China. ‘Fight Club’ Author Chuck Palahniuk Says China’s Censored Ending Is Actually Truer to His Vision.
- The US has plans to patrol the space around the moon. The Moon should be privatised to help wipe out poverty on Earth, economists say. We’re Not Prepared for Contamination Between Worlds. The quest to avert an asteroid apocalypse is going surprisingly well.
privatizing the Earth didn’t wipe out poverty did it https://t.co/xyWhdvxp1H
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 15, 2022
- Garbage Hunters: Deciphering North Korea Through Its Trash.
- ‘I just feel like Rhode Island has failed’: The family of a 12-year-old girl with autism is among those in limbo because of the lack of services for those in crisis.
- Dividing Up the Autism Spectrum Will Not End the Way You Think.
- The Real Reason America Doesn’t Have Enough Truck Drivers.
- As intended: The 2020 census had big undercounts of Black people, Latinos and Native Americans.
- Pessimism of the Intellect, Optimism of the Whale. Cryptocurrency is a giant Ponzi scheme. NFTs Are, Quite Simply, Bullshit. Snowpiercer Asks Us to Imagine the End of the World — And the End of Capitalism. The Stories We Tell Ourselves About Marriage Are Wrong.
I have a crypto curious person in my life who explained that it’s because no one knows what happens with crypto when the power goes out for a long time, which is a pretty big problem for something that is supposed to be prepper currency https://t.co/U3fe0kl4KK
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 24, 2022
- We need to talk about this Scarlet Witch action figure.
- Mapping the celebrity NFT complex. Web3 is the future, or a scam, or both.
- New Data Shows 61% Rise in U.S. Prison Deaths in 2020. Only One (1) Media Outlet Reported On It.
- The U.S. is limiting compassionate release in plea deals. Many say that’s cruel.
- Suicide hotline shares data with for-profit spinoff, raising ethical questions. Babies Are Dying of Syphilis. It’s 100% Preventable.
- Law enforcement agencies in Minnesota have been carrying out a secretive, long-running surveillance program targeting civil rights activists and journalists in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd in May 2020.
- Marquette has changed its university seal. Indigenous Education at Marquette.
- The Dawn of Everything.
- Against longtermism.
- A Henry Darger Dispute: Who Inherits the Rights to a Loner’s Genius?
- In my 35 years as a reporter, I have never seen anything of Afghanistan’s magnitude.
- Rich people, y’all.
- Types of dissertations.
- Red poets’ society: the secret history of the Stasi’s book club for spies.
- Giant spiders expected to drop from sky across the East Coast this spring.
- Vegetarians have 14% lower cancer risk than meat-eaters, study finds.
- What I Learned From Recording My Thoughts for an Immortal A.I. I mean…
- And the arc of history is long, but…
which in turns suggests he grew up watching Batman: The Animated Series on TV https://t.co/qo7GK6pvdy
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 5, 2022
— This Desiring-Machine Kills Fascists (@unflicuneballe) January 22, 2022
most of the cast is simply too old https://t.co/qkcc9bTYKW
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 7, 2022
Written by gerrycanavan
March 12, 2022 at 6:38 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with AAUP, academia, Ada Palmer, Adam Kotso, administrative blight, affirmative action, Afghanistan, African literature, Afrofuturism, Agamben, Alabama, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Amazon, America, anti-colonialism, asteroids, autism, Batman, biopolitics, books, Breath of the Wild, bullying, cancer, capitalism, CFPs, child poverty, China, China Miéville, climate change, comics, Comixology, conferences, coronavirus, coups, COVID-19, cryptocurrency, David Graeber, denialism, Detroit, disability, Disney, dissertations, Dune, East Germany, ecology, elections, essays, Facebook, Fight Club, FIYAH, Fledgling, fossil fuels, free speech, FSU, games, gay rights, geoengineering, Georgia, guns, Hawaii, Henry Darger, Hertz, How the University Works, humanitarianism, indigeneity, inflation, IPCC, Jacobin, Jeff Bezos, Joe Biden, kidney donation, Kim Stanley Robinson, longtermism, Lord of the Rings, Marquette, marriage, marriage equality, Mars, Marvel, Maus, Minnesota, MMAcevedo, Moby-Dick, moral panics, musicals, neoliberalism, NFTs, Nintendo, North Korea, nuclearity, Octavia Butler, Omega Point, Ozymandias, pandemic, parenting, pedagogy, police state, police violence, politics, prison-industrial complex, prisons, Pulp Fiction, Putin, race, racism, Russia, Scarlet Witch, school shootings, science fiction, science fiction studies, SFFTV, SFRA, SFRA Review, slavery, Snowpiercer, spiders, Star Trek, Star Trek Picard, Starbucks, Stasi, suicide, Superman, syllabi, taxes, teaching, tenure, the Anthropocene, the Census, The City and the City, the Moon, theory, Tolkien, trampolines, truck drivers, true crime, Trump, Twitter, Ukraine, Uneven Futures, unions, vegetarians, violence, war on education, World War 3, yachts, Zelda
GSA #7: A MAN OF THE PEOPLE!
Gerry and Aaron talk about what may be their favorite Achebe novel yet, A Man of the People, originally published in 1966. Also they try to figure out whether or not America had a coup.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 5, 2021 at 9:24 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with A Man of the People, Chinua Achebe, coups, Grad School Achebe, my media empire, podcasts, Trump
Friday Links!
my fall plans / delta variant pic.twitter.com/55UwaOEsx1
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 12, 2021
- I’ll be doing a lecture and seminar series as a virtual scholar-in-residence at The Rosenbach this fall on four of Octavia Butler’s novels. Here are the details! We’re reading Kindred, Wild Seed, Dawn, and Parable of the Sower…
- Transfer Orbit dives into the latest on The Last Dangerous Visions.
- In Praise of the Info Dump: A Literary Case for Hard Science Fiction.
- Alien again, again.
- Music to my ears: Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, and the MyPillow Guy Are in Huge Trouble. Not as great: A rogue DOJ lawyer almost kept Trump in office.
- When they fantasize about killing you, believe them.
- Breakthrough cases may be a bigger problem than you thought. Children’s hospitals are swamped with Covid patients — and it may only get worse. How the Pandemic Ends Now.
- Census minute: Census Bureau releases population data, starting scramble to redraw congressional lines. We’re Going The Wrong Way. Wisconsin grows modestly and more diverse while Milwaukee plummets to 1930s levels, Census data show. Milwaukee city workers moved out in droves after the residency rule ended. It was a boon for the suburbs. Wisconsin as democracy desert.
- And in local news: Milwaukee’s comedy market is surging with new Improv club, more shows as people seek escape from COVID-19.
- Secret IRS Files Reveal How Much the Ultrawealthy Gained by Shaping Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Tax Cut.” Your favorite senator and mine, Ron Johnson, features prominently.
- A people’s history of the Karen.
- The fall of Snopes.com.
- A Brief History of Dick: Unpacking the gay subtext of Robin, the Boy Wonder. Now it’s official!
- Put a man on the moon by whenever you get around to it.
- UFOs and the Boundaries of Science.
- Why Are Young People So Obsessed With Cults?
- A sweeping drug addiction risk algorithm has become central to how the US handles the opioid crisis. It may only be making the crisis worse.
- What’s the matter with book reviews?
- Climate Denial, Covid Denial and the Right’s Descent.
- A New Idea That Could Help Us Understand Autism.
- And what happens when the bugs all die?
we are confronted with a planetary ecological crisis whose scale and severity is absolutely without precedent in human history and the primary political and aesthetic response is calling out people for being “doomers”
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 12, 2021
They fuck you up, your mum and dad. / They may not mean to, but they do. / They fill you with the faults they had / And add some extra, just for you. pic.twitter.com/ciP9JaLtZY
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 10, 2021
Written by gerrycanavan
August 13, 2021 at 1:48 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Alien, aliens, America, apocalypse, autism, Batman, bees, book reviews, books, class struggle, climate change, comics, coronavirus, coups, COVID-19, cults, democracy, denialism, drugs, elections, gay rights, gerrymandering, hard science fictiom, Harlan Ellison, insects, leave me the birds and the bees, Milwaukee, my scholarly empire, NASA, Octavia Butler, opioids, pandemic, politics, rich people, Robin, Rudy Giuliani, science fiction, Snopes, snopes.com, taxes, the Census, the courts, The Last Dangerous Visions, the law, the Moon, the truth is out there, this is fine, Trump, UFOs, voting, Wisconsin
Happy Valentine’s Day Links!
* Very excited to welcome Adam Kotsko to Marquette later this week for his talk “Animated Nihilism: Rick and Morty, BoJack Horseman and the Strange Fate of the Adult Cartoon.”
* There was a nice interview with me at the ArchivesAWARE! site, kicking off a new series on Archives and Audiences.
* SFRA Review #323 is out! Check out the details on the upcoming SFRA conference in Milwaukee.
* CFP: The Journal of Dracula Studies. CFP: Žižek Studies special issue on “Žižek: What Went Wrong?”
* The Simpsons: What Went Wrong?
* The Problem With Annihilation’s Messy Release.
* Fantastic Beasts and What Could Have Been. They’re really not nailing this.
* Kim Stanley Robinson: The Radical Philosophy Interview.
KSR: Capitalism is still very feudal in its distribution of wealth. One of the great triumphs of Marxist historiography is to describe accurately the transition from feudalism to capitalism, why it happened and the differences. At a presentation I once gave with Jameson, I said something like capitalism is just feudalism liquidified. In the break he said, ‘Kim, it’s actually a big accomplishment for Marxists to be able to describe the change from feudalism to capitalism.’ I then brought up something he had taught me, Raymond Williams’s concept of the residual and the emergent, and said, ‘but there’s a lot more residual than people have imagined.’ That’s one of the only times I saw Fred startled by something I said. Although I think there’s an exchange of ideas between us, mainly he’s the teacher, I’m the student. He’s explained things that I never would have understood, and I treasure him for that. So it was nice to see him think, ‘Mmm, that’s an interesting thought.’
The residuals out of feudalism would be the power gradient and the actual concentration of wealth per se. In the feudal period, kings might not even have been as proportionally rich as top executives are now in relation to the poor. And if peasants weren’t murdered by passing soldiers, they were living with their food source at hand and working a somewhat decent human life. That isn’t largely true now of the dispossessed. So, capitalism is like feudalism in that, but worse.
* The Good Place and Divine Justice. Meet the Philosophers Who Give ‘The Good Place’ Its Scholarly Bona Fides. TV’s Dystopia Boom. Breakfast and Groundhog Day. Rod Serling: human rights activist as science fiction showrunner. Why the Culture wins. Netflix created a monster with its Cloverfield stunt, and Altered Carbon won’t be the last victim. Reproductive Futurism and Its (Dis)contents. Why I barely read SF these days. Against dystopia.
Star Wars in the 1980s: laser swords and magic powers and what a cool ship
Star Wars in the 2010s: loving your kids will not protect them from the world or from themselves, and their talents will destroy their lives in the same way your talents destroyed yours, if not worse
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 5, 2018
* My Butch Lesbian Mom, Bruce Springsteen.
* The Sublimated Grief of the Left Behind. How Academe Breeds Resentment. International Grad Students’ Interest in American Higher Ed Marks First Decline in 14 Years. Columbia University Gets In Bed with Trump. I’m a Stanford professor accused of being a terrorist. McCarthyism is back. How Hard Do Professors Work? Shameless and Hypocrisy at the MLA. And meanwhile, on the Singularity beat: Teaching assistant robots will reinvent academia. Universities in the Age of AI.
* Humanities Grads Gainfully Employed and Happy.
* White Supremacists Are Targeting College Students ‘Like Never Before.’
* The Olympic hero for our time.
* To U.S. Border Patrol, the Canadian border is 100 miles wide. A good overview of how Trump’s ICE differs, and doesn’t, from Obama’s; the major distinction seems to be empowering street-level officer to make policy-level determinations about enforcement. A Short, Brutal History of ICE. ICE Wants to Be an Intelligence Agency Under Trump. ICE Grants Stay To Arizona Father Whose 5-Year-Old Son Is Battling Cancer. Kansas chemistry instructor arrested by ICE while taking his daughter to school. ICE detains man at traffic court after DACA status expires, then frees him after outcry. Public Defenders Walk Out Of Bronx Courthouse After College Student Detained By ICE. Cuban immigrant awaiting removal dies in ICE custody. Green card veteran facing deportation starts hunger strike. Trump administration considered testing “abortion reversal” on unwilling prisoner. Give all immigrants the right to vote.
deporting a veteran who started using drugs to cope with untreated PTSD after being induced to serve in a war we shouldn’t be fighting by a promise of citizenship the country didn’t deliver on, to serve the racist whims of a universally loathed fascist the country didn’t vote for
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 2, 2018
* Know your police rape loopholes.
* How not to die in America. I Had to Bury My 26-Year-Old Son Because He Couldn’t Afford Insulin. Texas Woman Dies Because She Couldn’t Afford $116 Copay. What Aetna did here might not even be illegal.
* America: (Still) Not a Democracy. That’s not to say things still can’t get worse.
science fiction novel where an incredibly advanced society invents extreme life prolongation, which results in a now-immortal class of ultrawealthy perverts voting in fascists who appeal to their dim memories of the way the world worked when they were children
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 9, 2018
* In the richest country in human history.
* FEMA Contract Called for 30 Million Meals for Puerto Ricans. 50,000 Were Delivered.
* Even the Democrats (still) won’t talk about climate change. Democrats’ ‘Resistance’ to Trump Is Eroding, and So Are Their Poll Numbers. What Happened To The Democratic Wave?
* A map of the world after four degrees of warming. There’s even more good news below the map!
* An Urgent Crisis of Leadership, Climate, and Water is Unfolding in South Africa.
* And in Kentucky: Sometimes they get no water. Other times just a trickle. Often, they say, their water is so discolored it resembles milk or Kool-Aid or beer.
* Just six months from victory in Afghanistan.
* Fitness tracking app Strava gives away location of secret US army bases. Podcast listeners are the advertising holy grail. A Driver’s Suicide Reveals the Dark Side of the Gig Economy. slavery.amazon.com. Whole Foods as Amazon Hell. What Amazon Does to Poor Cities.
* I’m the Wife of a Former N.F.L. Player. Football Destroyed His Mind. Concussion Protocol.
* Here’s Everything We Used to Know About Han Solo’s Early Years. A Primer on All Things Wakanda.
Reading an unpublished @GerryCanavan paper on the contradictions of Black Panther: pic.twitter.com/HKjUmGAyVl
— Aaron Bady (@zunguzungu) February 7, 2018
* Arizona Man Sells His $6.5 Million Ranch Because Of Constant, Violent Alien Attacks.
* Supercut of Instagram travel photo clichés. Photos of Total Strangers Pretending to Be in Serious Relationships.
* Why is Civilization 5 still more popular than Civilization 6?
My favorite weird found-poetry I’ve discovered on this trip: in Switzerland and Germany first-person shooters are called “ego shooters.”
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) January 31, 2018
* The arc of history is long, but Hot sauce king Billy Mitchell is in danger of having his Donkey Kong records stripped away.
* Why Woody Allen hasn’t been toppled by the #MeToo reckoning — yet. This Is Why Uma Thurman Is Angry.
* Suicide and the opioid epidemic.
* Cancel student debt and grow the economy. Let’s Stop Normalizing Student Debt.
* College compiles first-ever index of slaves and their enslavers in NY. Slavery and the American University.
* Nation of Second Changes: Stories of people who received a pardon from Barack Obama.
* The Alt-Right Is Killing People.
* The Median Young Family Has Nearly Zero Wealth.
* Why Antonio Gramsci is the Marxist thinker for our times.
* I call it my brand: Marxism as Organized Sarcasm.
* Worf’s Dad Is Repeatedly Disgraced When Predictive Text Writes Star Trek: The Next Generation.
* Nintendo’s new cardboard extensions for Switch are blowing users away.
* Can’t stop the signal: here come the Firefly novels.
* ‘Speaking’ orca is further proof they shouldn’t be kept captive.
* The mutant crayfish that ate Europe.
* And this guy gets it: Nigel, the world’s loneliest bird, dies next to the concrete decoy he loved.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 13, 2018 at 10:01 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #quitlit, academia, Adam Kotsko, adjunctification, adjuncts, advertising, Aetna, Afghanistan, Africa, afterlife, aliens, alt-right, Altered Carbon, Amazon, Amierca, animals, Annihilation, Antonio Gramsci, apocalypse, Arizona, artificial intelligence, Barack Obama, Billy Mitchell, birds, Black Panther, Bojack Horseman, border patrol, breakfast, Bruce Springsteen, capitalism, cartoons, Case Western, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, civilization, Civilization 6, Civilization V, class struggle, climate change, Cloverfield, Columbia University, concussions, conspiracy theory, crayfish, debt, democracy, Democrats, deportation, diabetes, digital economy, don't mention the war, Donald Trump, Donkey Kong, Dumbledore, dystopia, English departments, English majors, Episode 8, Europe, expanded universes, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them 2, fascism, FEMA, feudalism, Firefly, first-person shooters, football, games, gay rights, gerrymandering, gig economy, graduate student unions, Groundhog Day, Han Solo, Harry Potter, health insurance, Heaven, Hell, How the University Works, Iain M. Banks, ice, immigration, Instagram, insulin, Jameson, Journal of Dracula Studies, Kentucky, Kim Stanley Robinson, Klingons, Laurence Tribe, lesbians, loneliness, Marxism, McCarthyism, MLA, Monopoly, music, my brans, my scholarly empire, Nazis, Netflix, nihilism, Nintendo, Nintendo Labo, Nintendo Switch, Octavia Butler, Oklahoma, Olympics, orcas, organized sarcasm, paranoia, pardons, Pennsylvania, pets, philosophy, photography, podcasts, police state, police violence, politics, polls, pollution, Puerto Rico, quit lit, rape, rape culture, reproductive futurity, Rick and Morty, robots, Rod Serling, Russia, science fiction, Serenity, SFRA, SFRA Review, slavery, South Africa, sports, Stanford, Star Trek, Star Wars, student debt, suicide, taxi waste, the Anthropocene, The Culture, The Good Place, the humanities, The King of Kong, The Last Jedi, the Olympics, The Simpsons, the Singularity, The Twilight Zone, TNG, Trump, tweeting, Uber, voting, Wakanda, water, wealth, whales, white supremacists, Whole Foods, Winter Olympics, Worf, Žižek
Weekend Links!
* I’m heading to Zurich later tonight for the From Human to Posthuman? Ethical Inquiry workshop to be held at the Collegium Helveticum. I’ll be talking about the Anthropocene and various versions of The Time Machine, jumping off my Paradoxa “Global Weirding” essay and a loooong forthcoming piece for a Ralahine Utopian Studies collection on “Science Fiction and Utopia in the Anthropocene.”
* Faculty Favorites: Books to Add to Your Shelf This Spring. With a book recommendation from me, among others!
* Analyzing Elections Since Trump Won the Presidency. Here’s everything Republicans could be doing to stop Trump. Are you a Saturday Night Massacre or a Saturday Night Massacan’t? Trump Launched Campaign to Discredit Potential FBI Witnesses. Trump’s Friends and Advisers Are Terrified of What He Might Say to Mueller. Elite opposition to Trump is collapsing.
* More great Le Guin remembrances from Karen Joy Fowler, Kim Stanley Robinson, adrienne maree brown, Jo Walton, Jacob Brogan, Matthew Cheney, and many others…
did anyone predict how the mid-century-and-onward increase in number of celebrities would lead to decades of constant mourning?
— traxus4420 (@traxus4420) January 24, 2018
* And in a rather Le Guin mode: Read the Into the Black Contest’s Winning Story, Set in a Future Where Economics Are Also Humane.
* I hadn’t realized the Aronofsky adaptation for HBO was cancelled, but MaddAddam is coming to TV, again.
* For many years now, tuition-dependent institutions — notably small private colleges and regional public universities — have grappled with such existential questions. Many find themselves in a difficult, complex market, with rising costs in operations, pressure to keep tuition down, increasing competition, an insufficient supply of traditional-age students, and national doubts over the value of college. Naturally, those factors have prompted many observers to take a dour view of the institutions’ future. Moody’s Investors Service recently downgraded higher education’s outlook from “stable” to “negative,” noting that demographic challenges, weak revenue growth, and rising labor costs will bedevil colleges in the near term.
* Life transformed into data is life permanently mobilized for capital.
* We Are Truly Fucked: Everyone Is Making AI-Generated Fake Porn Now.
* As ICE Targets Immigrant Rights Activists for Deportation, Suspicious Vehicles Outside Churches Stoke Surveillance Fears. ICE is about to start tracking license plates across the US.
* Research has identified embedded racism in IQ tests. Now, prosecutors in at least eight states are using that research—to legalize more executions.
* Prisons, as the journalist Tom Wicker once wrote, “have a dual function: to keep us out as well as them in.”
Authoritarianism is already here, it’s just unevenly targeted.
— Kelsey D. Atherton (@AthertonKD) January 26, 2018
Defund ICE, put its leaders on trial.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) January 24, 2018
* The female price of male pleasure.
* The gig economy and sexual harassment.
* Post-Presidency Benefits at Michigan State. NCAA president Mark Emmert was alerted to Michigan State sexual assault reports in 2010.
* Democrats Paid a Huge Price for Letting Unions Die.
[2020 Election]
Donald Trump Jr. (R): I am going to build a giant John Deere lawnmower and use it to run over poor people and minorities
John Johnson (D): Woah, woah, woah. That sounds expensive
— Jules (@Julian_Epp) January 26, 2018
* Some monkey news: First Primate Clones Produced Using the “Dolly” Method. 10 Monkeys and a Beetle: Inside VW’s Campaign for ‘Clean Diesel.’ Paris zoo evacuated after 52 baboons escape enclosure.
* Trump vs. migratory birds. Trump vs. the air itself.
* Oh no.
* Ghost towers: half of new-build luxury London flats fail to sell.
* State of the climate: how the world warmed in 2017.
* A world without Holocaust survivors.
* There’s only one story and we tell it over and over.
* The Short-Lived Normalization of Breastfeeding on Television.
* On the greatness of Swastika Night.
* California doing its best to prove the libertarians right.
* And are Dungeons & Dragons Players in a Cult? These Hilarious Warning Signs From 1989 Prove It.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 27, 2018 at 10:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 23andMe, academia, all animals vs. all humans, animals, apes, artificial intelligence, authoritarianism, billionaires, biocapital, birds, Bob Dylan, books, breastfeeding, capitalism, Center for the Advancement, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, class struggle, climate change, clones, cloning, college presidents, concussions, cults, death penalty, democracy, Democrats, deportation, Donald Trump, Dungeons and Dragons, ecology, elections, EPA, fake porn, FBI, football, genetics, gig economy, global weirding, grief, gymnastics, H. G. Wells, Hitler, How the University Works, ice, immigration, IQ tests, Karen Joy Fowler, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, Larry Nassar, libertarians, London, Maddaddam, Margaret Atwood, Marquette, Michigan State, Mirror Universe, misogyny, monkey news, mourning, museums, my scholarly empire, Nazis, NCAA, obituary, obstruction of justice, oh no, Oryx and Crake, Paradoxa, politics, pollution, pornography, posthumanism, poverty, prison-industrial complex, prisons, racism, Republicans, Robert Mueller, science fiction, sex, short stories, small colleges, sports, Star Trek: Discovery, supermax prisons, Swastika Night, Switzerland, television, the Anthropocene, the courts, the Holocaust, the law, The Time Machine, totalitarianism, true crime, Trump, tuition, unions, Ursula K. Le Guin, Utopia, Volkswagen, voting, We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves, web comics, zoos, Zurich
Wednesday Links!
* In case you missed it yesterday: the CFP for SFRA 2018 (7/1-7/4 at Marquette)!
* “We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings. Resistance and change often begin in art, and very often in our art, the art of words.” Rest in peace, Ursula K. Le Guin. The art of fiction. Fantastic.
* CFP: Petrocultures 2018 (Glasgow University).
* 19 Long-Lost Historical Words You Absolutely Need In Your Life.
* A new study finds an alarming rise in a novel form of psychological distress. Call it “neoliberal perfectionism.”
* But what if forty years of neoliberalism’s violently reiterated dogma that “there is no alternative” has left us incapable of imagining not only better worlds but also worse ones? On dulltopia.
* How Twitter Hooks Up Students With Ghostwriters.
* There are some things no man was meant to know: Should vegetarians assume they can eat French fries?
* U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan, Democrat of Niles, accompanied Amer Othman Adi to immigration headquarters Tuesday morning for what they thought would be a routine meeting. Instead, Adi, 57, was jailed and told he would be held until his deportation, which was over a dispute about the validity of his first marriage to an American in 1979.
* ‘I won’t fly refugees to their deaths’: The El Al pilots resisting deportation. Same sex couple sues State Department over decision on son’s citizenship. Border patrol arrests ASU adjunct who gave food and water to immigrants. ICE deporting its own protestors.
* Stochastic terrorism watch: Man threatened to kill CNN employees.
Happened across this line in an essay by George Orwell, who died Jan 21 in 1950: "A man who gives a good account of himself is probably lying, since any life when viewed from the inside is simply a series of defeats"
— David Ljunggren (@reutersLjungg) January 22, 2018
* Tourism to U.S. under Trump is down, costing $4.6B and 40,000 jobs.
* “Afghan Pedophiles Get Free Pass From U.S. Military, Report Says.”
The report, commissioned under the Obama administration, was considered so explosive that it was originally marked “Secret/ No Foreign,” with the recommendation that it remain classified until June 9, 2042. The report was finished in June 2017, but it appears to have included data only through 2016, before the Trump administration took office.
* A New Jersey college fired a professor, claiming they were “immediately inundated” with complaints of “fear” after she defended a BLM event on Fox News. We sued to look at the complaints. Total number of complaints in the first 13 days: one.
* The future is not good: South Korea, gripped by suicide epidemic, criminalizes suicide-pacts.
* What I’ve learned from my tally of 757 doctor suicides.
* Illustrated thought experiments.
* Nintendo headquarters, c. 1889.
* Rate My Professor and the adjunct professorate.
* Know your ethical conundrums. Free will. Scalars vs. vectors. When God closes a door, he opens a window.
* And when they knew the Earth was doomed, they built a ship.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 24, 2018 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, academia, academic freedom, adjuncts, Afghanistan, America, apanthropinization, CFPs, class struggle, conferences, cruelty, delicious French fries, deportation, don't mention the war, Donald Trump, dulltopia, dysania, dystopia, employment, English, ergophobia, Essex College, ethics, ethnic cleansing, Facebook, fake news, free will, fudgel, futurity, games, gay rights, George Orwell, ghostwriters, God, gongoozler, grumbletonians, How the University Works, ice, immigration, internships, Jameson, kakistocracy, kids today, labor, Mark Bould, Marquette, medicine, Milwaukee, my scholarly empire, neoliberal perfectionism, neoliberalism, New Jersey, Nintendo, obituary, oil, oil ontology, outer space, perendinate, perfectionism, Peter Frase, philosophy, physics, politics, postcapitalism, rape, rape culture, Rate My Professor, Rebekah Sheldon, refugees, right to work, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, slugabed, South Korea, stochastic terrorism, suicide, the law, thought experiments, tourism, Trump, Twitter, uhtceare, ultracrepidarian, unions voting, Ursula K. Le Guin, vegetarians, words, Žižek
Monday Jr. Links!
* Who knew my politics has a name?
the best minor faction of the Russian Revolution is the dissident interplanetary left pic.twitter.com/7MdsrXDFjP
— Mark J. Nelson (@mjntendency) July 16, 2017
* Not Just Being Right, But Getting Free: Reflections on Class, Race, and Marxism. The incredible lost history of how “Civil Rights Plus Full Employment Equals Freedom.” What Was Postraciality?
* Detroit’s Underground Economy: Where Capitalism Fails, Alternatives Take Root.
* What coastal elites don’t get about heartland nihilism.
* Trump’s tax cuts would give the poor $40 each and the ultrarich $940,000.
* Jeff Sessions wants police to take more cash from American citizens.
* The GOP’s moral rot is the problem, not Donald Trump Jr.
* The secret life of USC med school dean.
* The Horror Novel You’ll Never Have to Live is getting its dark, gritty reboot.
* An Oral History of The Simpsons’ Classic Planet of the Apes Musical.
* In Heaven, there is no pain.
* This podcast interview with Zeynep Tufecki on persuasion and control is pretty chilling, especially about the dystopian possibilities of microtargeted algorithmic messaging.
* George Lucas finally made a change to Star Wars I approve of.
* Weird Radio Signals Detected from Nearby Red Dwarf Star.
But if you’re getting the urge to invoke E.T., temper it: “In case you are wondering, the recurrent aliens hypothesis is at the bottom of many other better explanations,” Mendez wrote.
Get lost, buzzkill! This is happening.
Written by gerrycanavan
July 17, 2017 at 4:24 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, administrative blight, AHCA, aliens, America, Andrew Cuomo, bosses, capitalism, civil asset forfeiture, civil rights, class struggle, climate change, coastal elites, Democratic primary 2020, Detroit, dictators, dystopia, Facebook, freedom, Game of Thrones, health care, Heaven, housing bubble, housing market, immortality, Jeff Sessions, labor, Marxism, moral rot, nihilism, outer space, Owen Wilson, Planet of the Apes, podcasts, politics, postraciality, race, Republicans, Russian Revolution, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, social media, societies of control, Star Wars, taxes, the courts, the dissident interplanetary left, the heartland, the law, the rent is too damn high, The Simpsons, the truth is out there, Trump, UFOs, underground economies, USC, work, Zeynep Tufecki
I’ve Closed Every Tab I Had Open and I’m Not Sorry Links
* There are no links now. There is only the Orb.
it’s too late, he’s ascending pic.twitter.com/GRWVRoY7z0
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 21, 2017
HANNITY: Trump orders everyone to kneel before the Glowing Orb, and the media loses it
GINGRICH: They fear the Orb!
HANNITY: It's pathetic— Jason O. Gilbert (@gilbertjasono) May 21, 2017
Trump chuckled. "You mean the Chaos Orb?" pic.twitter.com/JCcdeAvQhU
— The Orb Appreciator (@TheBuzzard) May 21, 2017
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 21, 2017
Man, how DIDN'T this movie predict our current situation? pic.twitter.com/ZC5OwAMGUn
— Amma Marfo (@ammamarfo) May 22, 2017
Get 'em Bernie pic.twitter.com/zjqleyHljb
— maple cocaine (@historyinflicks) May 21, 2017
jeb bush: [sighing] that's not how you touch the orb
— kev (@kept_simple) May 21, 2017
Ur orb joke is not as funny as trump touchin that orb
— Cullen Crawford (@HelloCullen) May 21, 2017
* CFP: In Frankenstein’s Wake.
* Queer Artist Transforms Octavia Butler’s ‘Parable of the Sower’ Into Opera.
* Great literature, by the numbers. The Bachelor/ette, by the numbers.
* But if you read Spencer’s three-pronged narrative as Sam Wilson’s story, it looks very different. It becomes the story of an impeccably qualified black hero whose time in the spotlight is abruptly cut off by the return of an old white man who once had his position and of a public so thirsty for the moral certainty of the Greatest Generation that it can’t see the nightmarish perversion of it that’s right in front of them until it’s too late.
* LARB on the unionization struggle at Yale. A Case for Reparations at the University of Chicago. Crisis at Mizzou. Two sets of universities, two countries, two futures.
* The engine of irrationality inside the rationalists. Why the “Conceptual Penis” Hoax is Just a Big Cock Up. Some Work Is Hard.
So, some old white men who think they’re stone-cold rationalists + smarter than everyone else got taken in by a comically transparent scam?
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 20, 2017
* The Ethos of the Overinvolved Parent: Colleges are adjusting to increasing contact with adults who are more ingrained in their children’s lives than ever.
* A brief history of Esperanto.
* Science fiction’s new golden age in China.
* Science fiction doesn’t predict the future, it influences it.
* The Secret History of William Gibson’s Never-Filmed Aliens Sequel.
* Feds use anti-terror tool to hunt the undocumented. Arrests of Undocumented Immigrants Without Criminal Records Spikes 150%.
* Felony charges against inauguration protesters represent ‘historic crossroads.’ The airport lawyers who fought Trump’s Muslim ban are facing a Justice Dept. crackdown.
* Horror in Manchester. Terror in Kansas.
* The Death of the Suburban Office Park and the Rise of the Suburban Poor.
* Eternal Sunshine of a Spotless Centre.
* Sheriff Clarke leaving Milwaukee County for position with Department of Homeland Security. Sheriff David A. Clarke Jr.’s departure will be good for department and Milwaukee County. Plainly, indisputably unfit. But not so fast!
* Downward spiral: Special Prosecutor? Independent Counsel? Special Counsel? What’s the Difference? Meet Bob Mueller. A forgotten lesson of Watergate: conservatives may rally around Trump. Did Trump Commit a Crime in Sharing Intelligence With Moscow? Trump Gave Russians Secrets News Orgs Are Being Asked To Withhold. Trump’s disclosure endangered spy placed inside ISIS by Israel, officials say. Trump aides were in constant touch with senior Russian officials during campaign. Notes made by FBI Director Comey say Trump pressured him to end Flynn probe. Trump straight-up told the Russians he fired Comey to obstruct justice and it just. doesn’t. matter. ‘He Looks More and More Like a Complete Moron.’ Even while I was just trying to put this post together more bombshells dropped: Michael T. Flynn told President Trump’s transition team weeks before the inauguration that he was under federal investigation for secretly working as a paid lobbyist for Turkey during the campaign, according to two people familiar with the case. And this one! Flynn stopped military plan Turkey opposed – after being paid as its agent. And this one! It sure seems like Michael Flynn lied to federal investigators about his Russia ties. Shot. Chaser. Donald Trump has committed the exact offense that forced Richard Nixon to resign. Have Trump’s Problems Hit a Breaking Point? Articles of Impeachment for Donald J. Trump. “Don’t See How Trump Isn’t Completely F*cked.” Presidential impeachments are about politics, not law. This is the exact situation impeachment was meant for. Let’s hurry up. Nate Silver runs the numbers. When Will Republicans Dump Trump? Oh honey. But why not him?
* Understanding the self-pardon.
* This seems fine. This seems fine. This seems fine. This seems fine. This seems fine. This seems fine. This one really does seem fine. This seems fine. This is definitely not fine.
* Here at the end of all norms.
* Trump Team Stands by Budget’s $2 Trillion Math Error.
* Any Half-Decent Hacker Could Break Into Mar-a-Lago.
* Can the Anti-Trump Resistance Take the Philadelphia DA Office?
* SNL and the profiteers. Trump and the Hall of Presidents.
* MSNBC replaying its Bush-era history note for note.
* I think maybe I want to trade with the Netherlands.
* At least we can still laugh.
*record scratch*
*freeze frame*
POPE: Yep that's me. You're probably wondering how I ended up in this situation. pic.twitter.com/7RB3z2ByKL
— Benjy Sarlin (@BenjySarlin) May 24, 2017
* Star Trek: Discovery is definitely bad. This single photo proves it! Honestly, though, I thought that aside from the strong leads the new trailer looks cheap and bad, with terrible-looking secondary characters and a narrative I have very little interest in. I was very glad when The Incomparable explained to me that none of this had anything to do with the actual plot of the show.
* If The Last Jedi Really Has the Biggest Reveal in Star Wars History, What Could It Be? I’m hoping the poster is wrong, rather than (the only possibility) they’re making Luke bad.
* The Secret History of Dragonlance.
* Jordan Peele’s Next Project Is a Terrifying Lovecraftian Story About Race in 1950s America.
* Today in making fascism fun: 1Password’s new Travel Mode.
* Arctic stronghold of world’s seeds flooded after permafrost melts. The end of the penguins. Miles of ice collapsing into the sea. Scientists say the pace of sea level rise has nearly tripled since 1990. The Greening of Antarctica.
* Millennials and their damned avocados.
The best thing about our economic system is how effortlessly it transitioned into literal vampirism pic.twitter.com/jtL1GkWYvs
— Hippo (@InternetHippo) May 20, 2017
* Don’t Like Betsy DeVos? Blame the Democrats.
* It wasn’t just petty infighting that tanked Hillary Clinton’s campaign. It was the lack of any coherent program for the country. But don’t worry! There’s a plan.
* Laura Kipniss is apparently being sued for Unwanted Advances. The book seemed to be absolutely begging for a lawsuit; if the publisher wasn’t absolutely scrupulous it was extremely negligent.
* Maybe let’s not gene-sequence human intelligence.
* Can capitalism survive the rise of the machines?
* Statement of Teaching Philosophy. And on the pedestal these words appear. The circle of life. One fear. So you want to write a book. Why work so hard.
* Listen to what science teaches us, people!
* And the circus is (finally) closed.
Written by gerrycanavan
May 24, 2017 at 1:51 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 1Password, academia, AHCA, air travel, aliens, all praise to the Orb, America, animal rights, animals, Antarctica, apocalypse, artificial intelligence, austerity, avocados, Baton Rouge, beards, Bernie Sanders, Betsy DeVos, billionaires, Bob Mueller, books, budgets, capitalism, Captain America, centrism, CFPs, Chelsea Manning, China, circuses, class struggle, classified information, college, comics, concentration camps, conceptual penis, conspiracy theories, Cory Doctorow, Darko Suvin, Department of Justice, Disney, distant reading, domestic terrorism, Don't mention the war, Donahue, Doomsday Vault, Dragonlance, empire, Episode 8, Esperanto, espionage, eugenics, failure, fascism, FBI, fear, First Amendment, Frankenstein, free speech, futurity, gender studies, general election 2016, genetic engineering, governmentality, graduate student unions, H.R. McMaster, hackers, Hail H.Y.D.R.A., Hall of Presidents, health insurance, Hillary Clinton, hoaxes, How the University Works, ice sheet collapse, illegal immigration, immigration, impeachment, intelligence, invented languages, James Comey, Jeb Bush, Jordan Peele, Kansas, Labour Party, Laura Kipniss, Lawrence O'Donnell, literature, Louisiana, Manchester, Mar-a-Lago, Marvel, mass incarceration, math, Mike Flynn, millennials, Milwaukee, Mizzou, MSNBC, my teaching philosophy, Nate Silver, NEH, neoliberalism, Netherlands, Nick Spencer, Nixon, norms, North Korea, numbers, Octavia Butler, Ozymandias, Parable of the Sower, pardons, parenting, Paul Ryan, Philadelphia, philosophy, plagiarism, podcasts, poet, politics, polls, prison, prison-industrial complex, procrastination, protest, Rahm Emanuel, rationalism, real estate, refugees, reparations, Ringling Brothers, Robin Hood, Russia, Saudi Arabia, science, science fiction, sea level rise, Sean Hannity, self-pardons, Sheriff Clarke, slavery, SNL, Sokal hoax, special prosecutors, Star Trek, Star Trek: Discovery, Star Wars, suburbia, surveillance society, television, terrorism, the Arctic, The Bachelor, The Bachelorette, the circus, The Incomparable, The Last Jedi, the Pope, The Rock, Timothy Zahn, Title IX, Toshi Reagon, true crime, Trump, Twin Peaks, undocumented workers, University of Chicago, Unwanted Advances, Utopia, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, war on terror, Watergate, William Gibson, Wisconsin, work, writing, Yale
Friday Morning!
* Trump White House finding a new bottom, day after day after… whoa. Turning Point? They’re not even pretending. The Biggest Political Story in Decades. In a Private Dinner, Trump Demanded Loyalty. Comey Demurred. Days Before Firing, Comey Asked for More Resources for Russia Inquiry. Inside Trump’s anger and impatience. Another inside story. Time to shut everything down. And then on the third day he threatened to blackmail Comey with secret White House tapes. Only the Rock can save us now.
* The primary takeaway of the last 18 months is that no one should ever use email for any reason.
DID YOU KNOW when Trump finally goes down in flames and brings half the country down with him your dad will say it was all Obama’s fault
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 10, 2017
A person who still supports Trump after this week probably can’t be reached. Sorry.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 11, 2017
COMEY (2041)
COMEY, PART TWO (2043)
COMEY: THE COMPLETE SAGA (chronological re-edit for TV, 2044)
COMEY, PART THREE (2057; regrettable)— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 5, 2017
* Huge relief after only 11 million people vote for a fascist.
* Trump’s attacking the Census.
* Journalist arrested for trying to ask HHS Secretary Tom Price a question.
* What if populism is not the problem, but the solution?
* By refusing to negotiate with recently unionized graduate workers, Yale president Peter Salovey has announced in writing that the university will defy US labor law.
* Meanwhile, at the greatest public university in the world: Also included in the itemized spending was a dinner tab worth more than a year of tuition.
[concert]
SINGER: hows everyone doin tonight
CROWD: woo
ME (from the back in a normal speaking voice): it's actually been a tough few months— Bob Vulfov (@bobvulfov) May 9, 2017
* Locked Up for Being Poor. How Homeownership Became the Engine of American Inequality. U.S. life expectancy varies by more than 20 years from county to county. All the money’s gone, nowhere to go.
* Kristen Gillibrand, for and against. All this for someone who already ruled it out!
* Despite the confidence that the backlash to the healthcare bill will benefit Democrats, this doesn’t seem like good politics to be gleefully cheering on something you think is going to literally kill people. Especially, when you’re just singing over the supposed political benefits.
* History Will Remember These 217 House Republicans for Their Inhumanity.
* The Democratic Party Is a Ghost. Losing West Virginia. Priorities in Delaware. The Resistance, but not just as a joke. Stop promoting liberal conspiracy theories on Twitter.
* Trumpism is coming from the suburbs. Beyond Economics: Fears of Cultural Displacement Pushed the White Working Class to Trump.
* A study at Demos says voter suppression flipped Wisconsin. Some Words of Caution.
* I’m sure no one could find this objectionable: A top government official overseeing detentions and deportations is heading to a private prison company at the end of the month, according to a source with firsthand knowledge.
* The Little Known History of Black Women Using Soda Fountains as Contested Spaces.
* Fair Use Too Often Goes Unused.
* How a Utah county silenced Native American voters — and how Navajos are fighting back.
* The Higher-Education Crisis Is a Labor Crisis.
* How Marquette Is Becoming More Diverse.
* Everything We Know About Salt May Be Wrong.
* This is how SETI plans to find alien life by 2037.
* Chicago Approves Plan To Block Trump’s Name on His Tower With Giant, Flying Pigs.
* A Defense of the Tuvel Open Letter, at the Chronicle. And on the other side.
'In the XKCDification of political protest the demand has been replaced by the in joke, the threat to power by the witty signal to peers'
— Tim Maughan (@timmaughan) April 22, 2017
* How many Death Row prisoners are disabled? All of them.
* The length schools will go to cover up for bullies never ceases to amaze me.
* District: The Game of Gerrymandering for the Whole Family.
* Secret military space shuttle rattles Florida.
* Accelerationism: how a fringe philosophy predicted the future we live in.
* HIV life expectancy ‘near normal’ thanks to new drugs.
* Another neurological disease unexpectedly linked to gut bacteria.
* U.S. to Ban Laptops in All Cabins of Flights From Europe, Officials Say.
* Stephen Fry is being investigated for blasphemy. Amazing.
* That is not dead which can eternal lie: the aestivation hypothesis for resolving Fermi’s paradox.
* The Girls’ Soccer Team That Joined a Boys’ League, and Won It.
* Winners and losers of the recent nuclear holocaust.
* Write the book you needed to read when you were a child. Troubled Wisconsin man goes on 50 state killing spree. Guns and Roses tones it down. Our future in space. They fucking killed him. Top ten book rebrands, all-time. I hacked into Mike Pence’s email. Maybe I should give the Yankees another look. A new favorite metaphor. But it was alright, everything was alright, the struggle was finished. He had won the victory over himself. He loved Big Brother.
* And I don’t care how pretty or enigmatic it is, nothing will ever make Blade Runner 2049 a good idea.
Written by gerrycanavan
May 12, 2017 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #TheResistance, 2020, a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, academia, accelerationism, actually existing media bias, aestivation, air travel, airport security, alcohol, alcoholism, aliens, Are You There God? It's Me Margaret, bail, Big Brother, Black English, Blade Runner, Blade Runner 2049, blasphemy, books, bullies, Chicago, class struggle, college admissions, Comeygate, comics, conspiracy theories, copyright, cultural preservation, death penalty, death row, Delaware, delicious Girl Scout cookies, Democratic primary 2020, Democrats, deportation, disability, diversity, email, fair use, fascism, FBI, Fermi paradox, film, Florida, France, freedom of the press, games, general election 2016, general election 2020, Georgetown, gerrymandering, girls' sports, graduate student movements, Guns and Roses, Haiti, health, health care, Hillary Clinton, HIV, How the University Works, ice, immigration, inequality, Ireland, James Comey, Jefferson Davis, Judy Blume, Kristen Gillibrand, laptops, life expectancy, M&Ms, Marquette, medicine, Mike Pence, millennials, mortgage interest deduction, NASA, Native American issues, neurology, New Orleans, New York, Nixon, normalcy, nuclear holocaust, our brains work in interesting ways, outer space, Paul Ryan, pigs, politics, polls, populism, poverty, prison-industrial complex, protest, race, racism, real wages, Rebecca Tuvel, Russia, salt, science fiction, segregation, SETI, slavery, slaves, soccer, statues, Stephen Fry, suburbs, the Census, the Confederacy, the courts, the law, the Left, The Rock, Tom Price, trans* issues, true crime, Trump, TSA, Twitter, unions, University of California, Utah, Watergate, Welcome to the Jungle, West Virginia, White House, white people, Wisconsin, writing, xkcd, Yale, Yankee
Supersized ICFA Weekend Links!
* Hey, ICFAites! I’m posting this too late to hype yesterday’s talk on Black Panther and Wakanda as Nation, but there’s still time to hype my Rogue One roundtable at 8:30 and the Modern Masters of Science Fiction book signing at 12:30…
* One week from today! Buffy at 20!
* I really appreciated The New Inquiry‘s most recent issue on prison abolition, including this piece on home monitoring, this one on deaf inmates, and this one on bureaucratic malice.
* Awesome IndieGoGo success story: Nimuno LEGO tape.
* Every attempt to manage academia makes it worse.
* Teach the controversy: Did the CIA really astrally project to Mars in 1984?
* Neat project I’m coming late to: Young People Read Old SFF.
* “Mr. Thursday.” By Emily St. John Mandel.
* The Gig Economy and Working Yourself to Death.
* What Happens If a Nuclear Bomb Goes Off in Manhattan? How to survive a nuclear blast.
* Other genres merely represent everyday life. Science fiction hopes to change it.
* New Zealand river granted same legal rights as human being.
* The Existential Hokiness of Rick & Morty.
* Purplish Haze: The Science Fiction Vision of Jimi Hendrix.
* “Comrade, Can You Paint My Horse?” Soviet Kids’ Books Today.
* Being Kim Stanley Robinson. After the Great Dithering.

Julia muppet
Credit: Sesame Workshop
* Sesame Street’s newest puppet is a four-year-old with autism.
* Disabled Americans: Stop Murdering Us.
* “Let’s talk about the weird psychosexual energy in Beauty and the Beast.”
* “Humpback whales are organizing in huge numbers, and no one knows why.”
* Animal rights lawyer says zoos are solitary confinement for animals. No animals have all the attributes of human minds; but almost all the attributes of human minds are found in some animal or other. The beginning of the end of meat. Scientists are messing around with 3-D printed cheese.
* Great news: Authorities believe they’ve captured the individual responsible for most of the JCC bomb threats. The Slip-Up That Caught the Jewish Center Bomb Caller.
* With a 10-day supply of opioids, 1 in 5 become long-term users. Drugs are killing so many people in Ohio that cold-storage trailers are being used as morgues.
* With Trump Poised to Change the Legal Landscape, the Clock May Be Ticking on Graduate Unions. The shamelessness with which college administrations have courted this outcome is amazing, even by college administration standards.
* How One Family Is Beating the NCAA at Its Own Game.
* Here’s the Important Stuff That Happens in Iron Fist So You Don’t Have to Watch It. Netflix and Marvel’s Iron Fist is an ill-conceived, poorly written disaster. The Iron Fist TV Series Is Marvel and Netflix’s First Big Failure. Five Comments on Iron Fist.
* Paranoia in the Trump White House. Trumpism and academia. Trump’s Cuts. A day in the life of a poor American under Trump’s proposed budget. North Korea. The Incredible Cruelty of Trumpcare. Trumpcare goes down. Democrats Will Filibuster Neil Grouch’s Nomination. What to ask about Russian hacking. New York Attorney General Steps Up Scrutiny of White House. Why they voted Trump. r/Donald. It’s a better time to be doing any kind of leftist politics than it was a decade ago. Well, we’ll see…
Like the dog with two bones, the Freedom Caucus got so greedy about the number of children it could kill it didn’t get to kill any. #sad
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 24, 2017
* It’s hard in all this mess to pay attention to the little things, but man.
* My fascism will be big, beautiful, and sustainable, or it will be bullshit.
* Overall, Obama’s performance in office looks like most American presidencies since Reagan, not altering all that much at home while pressing ahead with imperial tasks abroad—in effect, a largely conventional stewardship of neo-liberal capitalism and military-diplomatic expansionism. No new direction for either society or empire emerged under him. Obama’s rule was in this sense essentially stand-pat: business as usual. On another plane, however, his tenure was innovative. For he is the first celebrity President—that is, a politician whose very appearance was a sensation, from the earliest days of his quest for the Democratic nomination onwards: to be other than purely white, as well as good-looking and mellifluous, sufficed for that. Catapulted into the White House on colour charisma and economic crisis, and commanding the first congressional supermajority since Carter, Obama in office continued to be an accomplished vote-winner and champion money-raiser. But celebrity is not leadership, and is not transferrable. The personality it projects allows no diffusion. Of its nature, it requires a certain isolation. Obama, relishing his aura and aware of the risks of diluting it, made little attempt to mobilize the populace who cast their ballots for him, and reserved the largesse showered on him by big money for further acclamation at the polls. What mattered was his personal popularity. His party hardly counted, and his policies had little political carry-through.
* What If Students Only Went to School Four Days a Week?
* Body cameras and the nightmare state.
* When corporations colonize academia.
* White, Irish, and undocumented in America.
* Children as young as 3 detained 500 days — and counting — in disgraceful immigrant prisons. Rape Victims Aren’t Seeking Help For Fear Of Deportation, Police Say. Banking on Deportation. There was an Africa trade meeting with no Africans because all their visas got denied.
* Sheriff David Clarke’s jail forced a woman to give birth while in shackles. The newborn died.
* The long now: A Computer-Generated Coliseum that Will Disintegrate for 1,000 Years.
* Scientists Brace for a Lost Generation in American Research.
* A special issue of Orbit devoted to David Foster Wallace.
* Functional illiteracy in Detroit.
* Why Does Mt. Rushmore Exist?
* Everybody in the NBA is obsessed with PB&J sandwiches.
* Missing Richard Simmons turned out super gross. Don’t listen.
* Congress Moves to Strike Internet Privacy Rules From Obama Era.
* I’ve been really interested in this: A major study finding that voter ID laws hurt minorities isn’t standing up well under scrutiny. A follow-up study suggests voter ID laws may not have a big effect on elections.
* Are we raising racists? Pay attention to what your kids watch on their screens.
* Tomb of Santa uncovered in Siberia.
* Educational attainment in America.
* The Peter Parker/Mary Jane Watson Marriage Will Never Ever Return “Up To Infinity” Says Dan Slott.
* Or a tweet. Probably a tweet.
* A Tale Which Must Never Be Told: A New Biography of George Herriman.
* Trans, Disabled, And Tired Of Fighting To Get Into Bathrooms.
* Appliances used to last decades.
* A year in Eden: Remaining cast of TV show finally leave their remote Highland home.
Now the remaining cast of a TV show have finally left their remote home – to virtual anonymity.
Instead of being crowned reality TV celebrities and fought over by agents, the 10 who made it through the 12 months have learned that only four episodes have been shown – the last seven months ago.
* Mr. Rogers vs. the Ku Klux Klan.
* Andy Daly reviews Review.
* CFP: Chuck Berry in the Anthropocene.
* SNL quick change, Jeff Sessions to mermaid.
* I still believe in a place called Duckburg.
* No.
* Action Lad and the Living Sword!
* And the arc of history is long, but there’s an Attack from Mars pinball machine remake coming later this year.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 25, 2017 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 3D printing, academia, administrative blight, Africa, America, Andy Daly, animal intelligence, animal minds, animals, appliances, Attack from Mars, austerity, autism, Barack Obama, bathrooms, Beauty and the Beast, Black Panther, body cameras, Bowie Studies, Buffy, bureaucracy, celebrity, cheese, children's literature, Chuck Berry, CIA, class struggle, climate change, college basketball, comics, corpocracy, corporations, creeps, cruelty, David Bowie, David Foster Wallace, deafness, democracy, deportation, Detroit, disability, Disney, drug addiction, drugs, Duck Tales, ecology, Eden, education, fantasy, fascism, games, George Herriman, gig economy, graduate student movements, graduate student unions, hacking, health care, How the University Works, ICFA, illiteracy, immigration, IndieGoGo, Iron Fist, Jacobin, JCCs, Jeff Sessions, Jimi Hendrix, kakistocracy, Kate McKinnon, kids, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, King Kong, KKK, Krazy Kat, labor, leftism, LEGO, malice, management, Marquette, Mars, Martin O'Malley, Marvel, Mary Jane Watson, meat, mermaids, Mexico, Michigan, Milwaukee, Missing Richard Simmons, Modern Masters of Science Fiction, Mr. Rogers, Mt. Rushmore, Muppets, music, NBA, NCAA, Neil Gorsuch, Netflix, New York, New York 2140, New Zealand, Nintendo, North Korea, nuclear bombs, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, obsolescence, Octavia Butler, Ohio, outer space, parenting, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, pinball, podcasts, police, police state, politics, prison, prison abolition, prison-industrial complex, privacy, race, racism, radiation, reality television, Reddit, Review, Rick and Morty, Rick Perry, rivers, Russia, Santa, satire, school, science, science fiction, Sesame Street, sex, Sheriff Clarke, Siberia, SNL, solitary confinement, Soviet Union, space junk, Spider-Man, stalking, Star Trek, Star Wars, Supreme Court, terror, terrorism, the Anthropocene, the filibuster, the Internet, the Irish, the law, the long now, The New Inquiry, the Senate, they say time is the fire in which we burn, time travel, toys, trans* issues, Trump, Trumpcare, USSR, Utopia, voter fraud, voter ID, Voyager spacecraft, Wakanda, water, whales, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, work, young adult literature, young people, zoos
Sunday Night Closing All My Tabs
* My review of Kim Stanley Robinson’s (excellent!) New York 2140 is finally up at the Los Angeles Review of Books: Utopia in the Time of Trump.
Where most contemporary histories of the future imagine climate change as either an annoying irritation or else the end of history — the disaster that will end civilization — in New York 2140 Robinson cuts more of a middle path. Climate change does indeed prove utterly catastrophic in this novel, laying waste to the coastal cities where a startling percentage of the world’s population currently lives, and devastating a huge amount of infrastructure and fixed capital, costing trillions of dollars — but humans are incredibly versatile problem-solvers, and we adapt. Technical solutions like sea walls and skybridges are really only the start of what would be necessary in a flooded Manhattan. Think of the immense social changes, the legal, economic, and architectural structures that would need to be innovated when huge areas of major cities are permanently underwater, or indeed become part of the intertidal zone. Even by 2140, nearly 100 years after the start of the crisis, the long work of retrofitting civilization to rising sea levels goes on, and not all of it is even that unhappy; it’s no secret that the capitalists use the same phrase to denote both crisis and opportunity, creative destruction….
* Don’t worry, kids, it’s just a story.
* More Hugos lists! Octavia E. Butler is actually listed on a few of these! Keeping my silly Hugo dream alive.
* Also at LARB: A Mark Fisher memoriam and a review of his last book, The Weird and the Eerie.
* Getting ready for Marquette’s big Buffy at 20 conference: Every episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, ranked. Buffy the Vampire Slayer video games, ranked from best to worst. Buffy the Vampire Slayer was a feminist parable for everyone – including Anthony Stewart Head. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is the greatest show in the history of television. The Enduring Legacy. Genocide of the Vampires. How Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s Most Hated Season Became Its Most Important. On “The Body.” Twenty years later, the world needs Buffy more than ever. A few more at MeFi. And from the archives, David Graeber.
* CFPs at Science Fiction Studies on climate change fiction and Frankenstein.
* And don’t sleep on the CFP for SFRA 2017, due at the end of the month.
* Marquette: a university on the… grow?
* Want To Know About Racially Motivated Policing? Ask Literally Any Person of Color in Milwaukee.
* Data Draws Link Between Metro Milwaukee’s Segregation and Poverty.
* 50th Anniversary of the Milwaukee Fair Housing Marches.
* #4.
* This isn’t a complete picture — it is too nostalgic for a lost age of exclusion, and misses completely the despair caused by the total collapse of the profession — but all the same I found it a powerful critique of the university today: Our Hallways Are Too Quiet.
* Probably the best piece of art criticism ever written: Appraising the Brady Bunch’s Art Collection.
* More Lovercraft from the great Ali Sperling! H.P. Lovecraft’s Weird Body.
* The New York Times reviews Lower Ed by the great Tressie McMillan Cottom.
* Sold! Wild New Theory Suggests Radio Bursts Beyond Our Galaxy Are Powering Alien Starships.
* Think Twice About Escaping Earth to an Exoplanet. Trappist-1 is already ruined.
* On zeitgeist: Ozymandias statue found in mud.
* What will the 25th Century Call the 21st?
* The Handmaid’s Tale in the Age of Trump.
* A Women’s Strike Syllabus. And another.
* U.S. Colleges: Where Does The Money Go?
* Rutgers also diverted $11 million in student fees and $17.1 million from its general fund to cover the athletic shortfall. The average undergraduate now pays more than $300 in activities fees exclusively for the university’s N.C.A.A. teams.
* Gotta spend money to explain why you aren’t spending money.
* Bodies on the Gears at Middleburg. And from the right: Middlebury Reckons With a Protest Gone Wrong. From Mother Jones to Middlebury: The Problem and Promise of Political Violence in Trump’s America.
* Ideology of the March for Science.
* Are the Democrats totally screwed? The Democratic Party Seems to Have No Earthly Idea Why It Is So Damn Unpopular. Outsmarted: on the Liberal Cult of the Cognitive Elite. There Really Was A Liberal Media Bubble. The SEIU at the end of the world.
* Trump can’t even do a standard thing like firing all the US Attorneys without turning it into a train wreck. But here’s how he can turn it around. Why the Russia Story Is a Minefield for Democrats and the Media. Descent into Liberalism. Fantasizing about President Pence. Of no fixed address. Here’s How Much ‘Trumpcare’ Fucks You, Based On How You Get Your Insurance Now. Who wins and who loses under the Republicans’ health care plan. A Trumpcare flashback. Truly, freedom isn’t free.
Then, before you know it, the Wall Street Journal is an oracle of truth. You’re rooting for Cold War II. The FBI is your BFF. You’re a Democrat.
* This is so evil: Bill Would Let Employers Demand Workers’ Genetic Tests.
* In the future, everyone will publicly beg for health care for 15 minutes.
* If you want a vision of the future.
* The Perils of the New, Shiny George W. Bush.
* The Revolutionary Force of Stupidity: A Conversation with Matt Taibbi.
* Enemies of the People: How hatred of the masses bridges our partisan divide.
* Trump’s Mar-a-Lago is heaven — for spies!
* The Great Lakes Are Sicker Than You Think. Editorial: Don’t slash funding for the Great Lakes.
* Towards a Unified Theory of Why Men Send Dick Pics. Obviously, more research is required.
* Neonazis! I hate these guys. Indiana Jones and the Okay Fine We’ll Try Again.
* Why Dentistry Is Separate From Medicine.
* Twenty-First Century Headlines: Radioactive Boars in Fukushima Thwart Residents’ Plans to Return Home.
* Brain activity recorded as much as 10 minutes after death.
* West Virginia county sues drug distributors over opioid crisis.
* Today in the massive screwed-uppedness of American democracy.
Los Angeles County (red) has a larger population than each of the 43 individual states shown in blue. #mapping #geography pic.twitter.com/hBbPFWxwzB
— Mark Abraham (@urbandata) March 1, 2017
* George Republicans Pass Mid-Decade Re-Gerrymander Just in Case.
* Purple America Has All But Disappeared.
* Every semi-competent male hero has a more talented female sidekick. Why isn’t she the hero instead?
* Star Trek: Discovery announces exciting “the captain is probably evil and in any event will die at the end of the season” arc.
* Knives out for Marvel: they finally made a mistake big enough to be noticed. More from Noah Berlatsky.
* Study: Hillary Clinton’s TV ads were almost entirely policy-free.
* Officials with Alberta’s environment agency inspected the water lines on Tuesday afternoon and proclaimed it safe, while the town completed the required repairs by the end of day. Town’s Water Turns Pink In Horrifying Ghostbusters Throwback.
* Requiem for a Dil. We’re Looking for People with Management Potential. An Experiment to Determine if Rats Can Be Made to Hate Thanksgiving. It’s Not So Bad. Sad Truths: Mythological Creatures Edition. I wish human beings were as peaceful and loving as bonobos. We all have our struggles.
* Silicon Valley’s Secretive Alt-Right Followers.
* Review is back, thank heaven.
* Nostalgia for the childhood you never had: The Japanese opening for the X-Men Animated Series.
* Inside the cruellest RollerCoaster Tycoon park ever created.
* The arc of history is long, but Rookie Doctors Will Soon Be Allowed To Work Up To 28 Hours Straight.
* Aliens, Antisemitism, and Academia.
* “King Kong” and American Cultural History.
* 20 million at risk of starvation in world’s largest crisis since 1945, UN says.
* Interesting: The New Avatar Theme Park Is a Giant Spoiler.
In an interview conducted inside the park, Cameron said that the park is set in a timeline after the five movies. A time when the war between humans and Na’vi is over. A time when the Na’vi have begun to welcome humans onto their planet with opens arms.
* How the 20,699-word iTunes T&Cs became this year’s hottest graphic novel.
* Should California lower its voting age to 17? Yes.
* And dibs on the screenplay: Right now, in a vault controlled by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, there sits a 752-pound emerald with no rightful owner. This gem is the size of a minifridge. It weighs as much as two sumo wrestlers. Estimates of its worth range from a hundred bucks to $925 million. Over the past 10 years, four lawsuits have been filed over the Bahia emerald. Fourteen individuals or entities, plus the nation of Brazil, have claimed the rock is theirs. A house burned down. Three people filed for bankruptcy. One man alleges having been kidnapped and held hostage. Many of the men involved say that the emerald is hellspawn but they also can’t let it go.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 12, 2017 at 4:19 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #BlackLivesMatter, a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, abolish men, abolition, academia, academic freedom, actually existing media bias, administrative blight, advertising, Africa, Alberta, aliens, alt-right, America, Andy Daly, Angel, anniversaries, anti-Semitism, art, austerity, Avatar, Berkeley, bonobos, brains, Buffy, Bush, California, Canada, capitalist realism, CEOs, CFPs, Charles Murray, CIA, cities, class, class struggle, climate change, cloning, college, college football, college sports, comedy, comics, conferences, crowdfunding, David Graeber, death, democracy, Democrats, dentistry, despair, dibs on the screenplay, dick pics, Dilbert, drugs, ecology, emeralds, espionage, famine, FBI, feminism, Fermi paradox, for-profit schools, Frankenstein, free speech, Fukushima, futurity, games, gems, general election 2016, general strike, Georgia, gerrymandering, GINA, grading, graphic novels, Great Lakes, Hamilton, Harry Potter, health care, Hillary Clinton, How the University Works, Hugo awards, ideology, Indiana Jones, Iron Fist, ITunes, James Cameron, Japan, JCCs, Joss Whedon, Kim Stanley Robinson, King Kong, liberalism, look upon my works ye mighty and despair, Los Angeles County, Lovecraft, Lower Ed, maps, Mar-a-Lago, Mark Fisher, Marquette, Marvel, Mary Shelley, medicine, men, Middlebury, Mike Pence, Milwaukee, Milwaukee Fair Housing Marches, mortality, my media empire, my pedagogical empire, Nazis, NCAA, neoliberalism, New York, New York 2140, NFL, nuclear power, nuclearity, Octavia Butler, opioids, outer space, Ozymandias, pedagogy, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, polls, pollution, poverty, pre symptomatic genetic testing, prison, prison-industrial complex, privacy, protest, psychedelic drugs, race, racism, radiation, Republicans, resistance, Review, Russia, Rutgers, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science, science fiction, science fiction studies, scientific racism, segregation, SEIU, sex, SFRA, Siberia, Silicon Valley, standardizd testing, Star Trek, Star Trek: Discovery, starvation, stories, strikes, stupidity, teaching, terms and conditions, terrorism, The Bell Curve, The Brady Bunch, the eerie, The March for Science, the weird, Trappist-1, Tressie McMillan Cottom, true crime, Trump, Trumpcare, unions, universities, US attorneys, Utopia, Venn diagrams, violence, voting, water, West Virginia, white supremacy, women, woolly mammoths, X-Men, zeitgeist
Weekend Links!
* My upcoming Studies in Genre course has been cancelled because it has been rendered superfluous.
@casskhaw self-insertion fanfic about being a college English professor, beloved novelist and also banging coeds
Literary fiction
— Dr. NerdLove (@DrNerdLove) February 18, 2017
* I realized I’d never gotten around to adding Paradoxa 28 to the sidebar. Check it out, if you haven’t yet!
* Cuban highlighted English, philosophy, and foreign language majors as just some of the majors that will do well in the future job market. “The nature of jobs is changing,” Cuban said.
* Love as Political Resistance: Lessons of Audre Lorde and Octavia Butler. Parable Of The Sower – Not 1984 – Is The Dystopia For Our Age.
* Wikipedia vs. the deletionists.
* Style guide: the look of white supremacy.
* This was beautiful: Coed CYO hoops team defies archdiocese order to kick girls out, forfeits season.
“Is your decision to play the game without the two young ladies on the team, or do you want to stay as a team as you have all year?” asked parent Matthew Dohn. “Show of hands for play as a team?”
Eleven hands shot up in unison. No one raised a hand when asked the alternative.
Assistant coach Keisha Martel, who is also the mom of one of the girls, Kayla Martel, reminded the team of the consequences. They had been told that playing the girls would mean the rest of the season would be forfeited.
“But if the girls play, this will be the end of your season. You won’t play in the playoffs,” she warned.
“It doesn’t matter,” one boy replied and others echoed, before the team began to chant, “Unity!”
In the crowd, supporters cheered along. Several parents began to cry.
* Scenes from the Day without Latinos in Milwaukee.
* What It Feels Like When Your World Ends: Rebecca Evans on Black Wave.
* How many pounds do you need to be able to life to teach a literature class?
* The Trump White House Is Screwed, Big League. Justice Department warned White House that Flynn could be vulnerable to Russian blackmail, officials say. Trump Campaign Aides Had Repeated Contacts With Russian Intelligence. Warren v. Flynn. Taking a Step Back. The Fog of Trump. What a Failed Trump Administration Looks Like. Republicans Won’t Stand Up and Stop President Trump. So you want to brief the president. That’s a hell of an act. Democrats Demand Mar-A-Lago Membership List. As Presidents Live Longer, Doctors Debate Whether To Test For Dementia. Authoritarian government watch: 6/10. The Great Government Breakdown Has Begun. A New Breakthrough in the History of the “S—gibbon.” Trump Official Obsessed Over Nuclear Apocalypse, Men’s Style, Fine Wines in 40,000 Posts on Fashion Style. The press conference from Hell. Is It Time to Call Trump Mentally Ill? Admit it: Trump is unfit to serve. ‘President Supervillain’ Puts Trump’s Quotes in Red Skull’s Mouth, and It’s Disturbingly Perfect.
* Pitting class against race in the Age of Trump. Shadow of the Plantation.
* Before the Flood: Karel Čapek and the Destructive Drift of History.
* Fantasies of the deep state.
* Rise and Fall of a K Street Renegade.
* Russia has secretly deployed a new cruise missile that American officials say violates a landmark arms control treaty, posing a major test for President Trump as his administration is facing a crisis over its ties to Moscow.
* ICE detains a woman at a courthouse receiving an order of protection, likely after receiving a tip from her alleged abuser. ICE shows up at a women’s shelter. ICE Agents Arrest Men Leaving Alexandria Church Shelter. Why Did ICE Arrest & Imprison a 23-Year-Old DREAMer and DACA Recipient Living Legally in the U.S.? Trump Considering Using National Guard for Immigration Raids. How new is this? Is ICE Out of Control?
* Well this all seems in order: EPA nominee Scott Pruitt won’t say if he would recuse himself from his own lawsuits against the agency. He’s since been confirmed, of course.
"21st century history isn't one of my strong points. Too depressing."
– Dr. Bashir #DS9 "Past Tense, Pt 1"— Robert Hewitt Wolfe (@writergeekrhw) November 9, 2016
* Shocked, shocked to find gambling in the casino: Maybe College Isn’t the Great Equalizer. (More here.)
* Same joke but new study confirms that voter ID laws are very racist.
* Academics, your moment is here: Depression Is an Unlikely Advantage in the Fight Against Fascism.
* The Campus Free Speech Battle You’re Not Seeing.
* I’ll allow it: There’s Going to Be a Mystery Science Theater 3000 Comic Book.
* So preoccupied with whether they could, etc: Woolly mammoth on the verge of resurrection, scientists say.
Nothing sums up the contemporary moment better than this pic of a rich donor posing with a doomsday device at the president's private club pic.twitter.com/5bRukHdSzp
— John Carl Baker (@johncarlbaker) February 13, 2017
* Though this one is pretty good too.
* What We Talk About When We Talk About a Women’s Strike.
* What if we pretended something that was obviously an effect of wealth were biological? I think it might look a little something like…
* Obamacare Repeal Could Cripple Efforts To Combat The Opioid Epidemic. Paul Ryan wants to bring back lifetime limits. Millions now rely on these plans, and we should defend them until we can win something better. But we also shouldn’t entertain any illusions: the ACA marketplaces rest on a flawed health care ideology that tellingly attracts many adherents on the Right, including Ryan.
* News you can use: The 8 Most Inaccurate Depictions of Mars Ever Put on Film.
* The surgeon who wants to perform a head transplant by 2017.
* Marquette in the news! Marquette Law alum chosen as the first black Bachelorette.
* Lost Essay Reveals Winston Churchill Was Almost Certain Aliens Exist. He met the Daleks! It’s canon.
* Is it really time to teach 1984?
* “I understand that they feel like that is their body,” he said of women. “I feel like it is a separate — what I call them is, is you’re a ‘host.’ And you know when you enter into a relationship you’re going to be that host and so, you know, if you pre-know that then take all precautions and don’t get pregnant,” he explained. “So that’s where I’m at. I’m like, hey, your body is your body and be responsible with it. But after you’re irresponsible then don’t claim, well, I can just go and do this with another body, when you’re the host and you invited that in.”
* Another apocalypse: The oceans are losing oxygen.
* The New Star Wars: Aftermath Novel Reveals the Pitiful Fate of Jar Jar Binks. This bummed me out a lot, actually.
* Incredible: Suspect in North Korea killing ‘thought she was taking part in TV prank.’
* Of course you had me at “Squid Communicate with a Secret, Skin-Powered Alphabet.”
Written by gerrycanavan
February 18, 2017 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with abortion, academia, academic jobs, actually existing media bias, airports, America, animal intelligence, animals, apocalypse, arms control, artificial intelligence, assassination, Audre Lorde, authoritarianism, autocracy, basketball, Black Wave, border patrol, Captain America, chaos, class, class struggle, climate change, college, comics, deep state, democracy, deportation, depression, disability, Doctor Who, dogs, domestic violence, drugs, dystopia, ecology, English majors, EPA, fascism, free speech, Futurama, games, general election 2020, genre, geoengineering, head transplants, health care, Hillary Clinton, history, How the University Works, humanities, ice, immigration, Jar Jar Binks, jobs, justice, K Street, Karel Čapek, kids today, labor, Latinos, LEGO, lifetime limits, literary fiction, lobbying, Los Angeles, love, Mark Cuban, Marquette, Mars, medicine, mental illness, Michael Flynn, Milwaukee, music, Mystery Science Theater 3000, national security, neoliberalism, Nnedi Okorafor, North Korea, nuclearity, oceans, Octavia Butler, Oklahoma, oxgyen collapse, Parable of the Sower, Paul Ryan, pedagogy, police state, politics, pregnancy, protest, Putin, race, racism, reality television, Red Skull, resistance, Russia, science fiction, science is magic, Scott Pruitt, sexiness, sports, squids, Star Trek, Star Wars, Suicide Squad, supervillains, teaching, The Bachelor, The Bachelorette, the Constitution, the Daleks, the deletionists, The Handmaid's Tale, the prequels, totalitarianism, toys, Trump, tyranny, Van Halen, voter ID, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, War with the Newts, wealth, white people, white supremacy, Wikipedia, Winston Churchill, women, women's strike, woolly mammoth, work