Edmonton short trip - arrival + small things

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 10:39 pm
yuuago: (Germany - Reading)
[personal profile] yuuago
I spent the day on the bus, and now I'm in Edmonton.

The weather is pretty miserable; very chilly and kind of windy, and also it's snowing. But the ride down was fine. I did some thinking about my FTH fic and I might start working on it after breakfast tomorrow.

I managed to do two things today.

First, I headed over to the Alberta Council for the Ukrainian Arts. They have an art gallery/craft store that also sells pysanky supplies. I forget to buy dye pretty much every year, so I figured that I might as well pick some up in person. Anyway, I now have enough for this year and the next. (Not sure if I'll do any this year - I haven't blown out any shells - but there's still time.)

Then later this evening, I headed over to a poetry reading/book launch at Audrey's Books. It was for the poetry collection The Red We Silk by Nicole Lachat. It's been ages since I've been to something like this, and it was really nice! The work was pretty good too - some really nice imagery in this poet's stuff. I ended up picking up a copy, since I've been meaning to read more poetry anyway.

Ah, and I did some watercolour sketching when I went back to the hotel, too. I'd wanted to bring my fountain pen, so I put it in its tin, but the tin is also a watercolour set, so I figured I might as well bring some watercolour paper, annnnd yeah. I want to do that kind of thing more often, watercolour sketches of random objects (partially so I can get better at working with the particular colours in this set). So I'm glad I did that today.

Tomorrow will be the Art Gallery of Alberta and maybe a few other things. And the concert that I'm here for, of course.

more food

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 08:51 pm
calimac: (Default)
[personal profile] calimac
Mark Evanier can't think of any food he disliked as a child but likes now. I can, for myself: scallops, the shellfish. I disliked the taste, find it OK now.

That's not counting a lot of exotic cuisines I would probably have picked at if I'd encountered them as a child but didn't. College and grad school years were the great eras of discovery for me. I remember exactly when I first had Thai food: I was 25 and a colleague where I was working on my grad school work-study program took me out to dinner at what was probably then the only Thai restaurant in San Francisco. It was also one of the two spiciest Thai restaurants I've ever eaten in, the other being in Birmingham, England, a bit of a surprise since English versions of spicy cuisines tend to be very mild.

Memories of great meals of the past are giving me comfort since right now I'm not eating much of anything.

Clever music marketing trick

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 10:11 pm
brithistorian: (Default)
[personal profile] brithistorian

K-pop group STAYC just released the longest K-pop album I've ever heard: 17 songs, 50 minutes. It's called Stay Alive. Based on the title, I thought it was a live album, which intrigued me: I'd never heard a K-pop live album, because the K-pop industry is run by people like A., who want the live version to sound exactly like the recorded version, so there's no point in releasing a live album.

Anyway, I started listening to Stay Alive. The first song makes it clear that it's not a live album. By the time I got to the third song, I noticed that all the songs were being sung in Japanese. So I checked track list: It's Japanese versions of all of their songs. Then it hit me: I checked the dates, and November of this year will be sixth anniversary of STAYC's debut. Depending on how far in advance of their debut they signed their contracts, they could already be in the sixth year of their seven-year contract. And suddenly the whole album makes sense: They're showing their label that they can sing all of their songs in Japanese, in hopes that the label will start promoting them in Japan and also renew their contract, so that the group can "stay alive"! (I hope it works — I really like STAYC, and I'd hate to see them disband.)

Tags:

Old DVD commentaries posted to AO3 today

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 04:49 pm
petra: Barbara Gordon smiling knowingly (Default)
[personal profile] petra
Ashes to Ashes + DCU Crossover:
Holiday makers - Alex Drake, meet Barbara Gordon.

Avengers (2012):
Nutritious high protein - Why Steve Rogers's shirts fit the way they do. (Gen)

DCU:
A bird in the hand - Bruce Wayne/Dick Grayson, the first identity porn story, Brucie Wayne/Nightwing. With Jamjar.

Also from the How to Marry a Millionaire verse, Mussels, with Bruce/Dick/Clark.

À la recherche de la honte perdue - Bruce Wayne/Dick Grayson, in which Dick dresses as Marie Antoinette (just like in canon) and Bruce dresses as Louis XVI (canon!) and then they have sex (okay, that was me).

If you're on fire - Steph Brown, Cassandra Cain, and Kon-El have Adventures.

In Flagrante Delicto - Slade Wilson/Dick Grayson, co-written with Rubynye, as were the commentaries. (Yes, I do know how much it's going to suck for people to get a heads-up from her, but it's better than losing her words.)

So unlike a wife, Bruce Wayne/Dick Grayson with crossdressing, Selina Kyle, and sharp edges.

DVD commentary by Petra on [personal profile] teland's Entelechy - Dick Grayson/Tim Drake, content some readers may find disturbing. <3 <3 <3 <3 <3

Good Omens:
Holy unnecessary - a snippet of the story where Crowley wakes up with a penis (no interpersonal sexual contact)

Life on Mars/Ashes to Ashes:
Ease my worried mind - Take Clothes Off As Directed (Dom/sub roles as socially normative/constructed), Sam/Gene, Sam/Annie.

L'appel du vide - Several stories deep into a series of Gene Hunt/Alex Drake/Sam Tyler/Annie Cartwright. With thatyourefuse.

Star Wars:
The letter and not the spirit - Obi-Wan/Anakin, a snippet of the story, involves cuddling

Mileage.

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 09:56 pm
hannah: (Laundry jam - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
It took me about an hour and a half to walk about four miles today. I had a couple of hours to get from 72nd street down to 4th street, so I figured I might as well go on foot to use the time. I didn't get a lot of thinking done, which I put down to having to keep dodging and weaving through crowds - that kind of thing's easier when there's nobody in my way, on foot or any other method of transportation. Which is on me for sticking to a busy street at a busy time of day than walking a few blocks over and trying on that.

There's also my head's not here or there, and I need to find some space to drift.

(no subject)

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 07:10 pm
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
Very random hockey posting, more posting this for my own reference later. I actually couldn't find these articles via the google the next day, I had to use my browser's history function to link them to someone.

Habs goalie Jakub Dobes got a warning, told to calm down. He was verbally engaging opposing players and challenging the officials' work on the ice.

Next day he addressed the incident. Dobes said he asked the referees to step in after an Islanders player said something that "had no place in a hockey game."

We don't know who said what, but a lot of hockey fans in multiple places are assuming it was Tony DeAngelo saying F slurs. I cannot find a citable source that he's got a history of that and hockey fans have a tendency to be too sure of themselves, but it's notable that there seems to be a broadspread agreement that's probably what happened... and then it was Dobes who got the warning for being upset about it.

Weirdly, Habs is a team I know very little about. I am a goalie fan in general, but Dobes was not on my radar. Going to be paying a bit more attention to Montreal.

Gaming Update

Wed, Mar. 25th, 2026 01:54 pm
cyphomandra: (balcony)
[personal profile] cyphomandra
I have now finished chapter 13 of FFVII Rebirth on hard mode and I have 87 of the 88 items required for Johnny's treasure trove. What now stands between me and completion is a) finishing Chadley's Brutal and Legendary Challenges (I've done all 6 Brutal and 7 of the 9 Legendary) and b) finishing chapter 14 on hard mode. (I did the piano! I got my son to operate one stick while I did the other, and it only took half a dozen attempts. Flushed with success we then attempted Let the Battles Begin, which is the reward piece, and did appallingly :D )

Unfortunately the last two legendary challenges are total nightmares. Ten rounds, fighting as Cloud and Zack for Bonds of Friendship (I have made it to the 5th round, once, after many, many attempts) or as Cloud and Sephiroth for To Be a Hero (the 4th round, ditto, ditto), and because Zack and Sephiroth are not playable characters you cannot change their loadouts. Technically Sephiroth's challenge should be easier because he is a stronger character but alas because he is also the villain that I have spent so much time fighting against I tend to put off healing him and instead feel vaguely satisfied when he gets stomped into the ground AGAIN and this is not helping :D

Chapter 13 was great though - I'd forgotten a lot of it, the way Cloud is so increasingly cold and unreachable, the bit where they start fighting on the same side as the Turks (against fiends) and then end up fighting against them, the individual trials for all the characters except Cloud. The Temple is a fantastic, unnerving setting, and the gravity shifts work much better now that I know I've solved them once.

I can't quite decide whether to push on with chapter 14 or to try and get at least one of the remaining challenges first. If I get To Be a Hero and do chapter 14, I will max out Cloud's weapon, which means he'll do more damage and it should make the last challenge easier (!). However, spending entire evenings getting nowhere is not all that relaxing, and I keep eyeing my unplayed games (current frontrunners - Cyberpunk 2077, the Witcher III, and Ghost of Yotei - feel free to put in your preferences).

While dithering, I picked up Stardew Valley and did a new playthrough. I'd looked at a min-max guide for ideas, and it really emphasises fishing early (for income and because if you're good at the fishing mini game that transfers over to your next playthrough, whereas a lot of your other expertise is locked behind XP levels). It definitely helped, although I didn't get a truffle before winter and there were none at the travelling cart, so I finished the community centre on day 2 of Spring. I am also significantly better at Skull Cavern dives than I used to be - I got down to level 100 with only two staircases, and I've picked up 9 prismatic shards.
Tags:

Tuesday, Top Five: It's History, Baby

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 08:16 pm
nevanna: (Default)
[personal profile] nevanna
Here are five works of historical fiction that I loved when I was growing up.

1. The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (1962) by Joan Aiken

When a cruel governess takes control of Bonnie’s home, she, her cousin Sylvia, and their friend Simon team up to thwart her plans.

Many of the stories and make-believe games of my childhood involved the cruel treatment of children in orphanages or boarding schools. I partially blame multiple viewings of the musical Annie on VHS (I didn’t only love it because the title character shared my name!), and Willoughby Chase pushed all the right buttons, while also offering a lot of pleasingly aspirational depictions of wealth and an enthralling story about two girls on an adventure together (along with a perfectly nice boy, but I didn’t care as much about him). Although it’s the first in a series, and the alternate-history elements are more prominent in later installments, this one stands very well on its own.

2. Child of the Owl (1977) by Laurence Yep

When her father’s gambling misadventures land him in the hospital, Casey goes to live with her maternal grandmother in San Francisco’s Chinatown, where she learns more about her Chinese heritage.

I questioned whether to call this book “historical fiction,” because it takes place only a little more than a decade before it was published, but I remember it fondly enough that I decided to go ahead anyway. It definitely does a good job of evoking a particular time and place (I can envision those roast ducks in the window now), and features a strong and enjoyable heroine and a touching story of intergenerational connection.

3. The Dreadful Future of Blossom Culp (1983) by Richard Peck

During plans to turn a local abandoned house into a Halloween attraction, Blossom’s psychic powers propel her from the 1910s to the 1980s, where she befriends the lonely boy currently living in the house.

I talked about the previous book in the Blossom Culp series, Ghosts I Have Been, last October. I think that I liked this one even more; it had a higher concentration of Teen Shenanigans, and Blossom’s fish-out-of-water experience in the 80s was a lot of fun to read about.

4. Back Home (1984) by Michelle Magorian

As the Second World War draws to a close, twelve-year-old Rusty, who spent the previous five years with a loving foster family in America, returns to an England that she barely recognizes and struggles against the social expectations of her family and school.

I probably picked up this book because it had a Terrible Boarding School, too, but it’s just one slice of the world that Magorian so richly brings to life. Rusty is a memorable and sympathetic main character, but when I skimmed the book again recently, I found her mother, Peggy, to be at least as interesting. After working as a driver and mechanic during the war, alongside a capable crew of other women, Peggy finds herself dissatisfied at the prospect of simply being a wife and mother, and as she tries awkwardly to reconnect with her daughter and keep the peace in a family that is experiencing many changes very quickly, she reclaims her own voice and agency.

5. Stepping on the Cracks (1991) by Mary Downing Hahn

Best friends Margaret and Elizabeth both have brothers who are fighting in World War II, and they believe without hesitation that all of the fighting is necessary, until an encounter with a military deserter challenges their convictions.

Hahn wrote a few historical novels in addition to her ghostly tales and contemporary coming-of-age stories, and I had a particular fondness for this one, which explored the impact of a faraway war on a community and the families that lived there. If Molly was your favorite American Girl, you probably would have enjoyed Stepping on the Cracks as well.

(no subject)

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 07:04 pm
blotthis: (Default)
[personal profile] blotthis
Merlin Sheldrake's Entangled Life (for [personal profile] genarti ) is the second book I started in 2023 I finished last month! Like Middlemarch, I liked the book very much, and I was surprised by the ending. 

In this case, it's because I got got by the sheer amount of backmatter! I thought I had about half the book left... no. Around 60 pages. Idiot. It's likely, though, if I had finished it in 2023, I wouldn't have written it up, so who's winning NOW??? 

I largely found the book delightful. I found Sheldrake particularly good at structure, a skill I desperately wish more science writers had, and which makes him very successful at writing science. He was able to, particularly chapter by chapter, structure the book around science-as-she-is-lived, following the complications, inversions, changes, misses, and upsets that characterize close attention to the study of any subject. It was such a pleasure to follow him down a line of thought and study, and then have him raise a question that undercut it, introduce a new study that changed the thinking, or reveal a limitation in the study or studies that I wouldn't have thought to consider. His understanding of understanding as a not just a constantly-changing, often-wrong activity, but of the drama of that activity, and that that drama is best relayed through making the reader re-experience of it... I loved it every time, from his discussion of how it's completely impossible to study mycorrhizal networks in a lab (not enough variables) or in the field (too many variables) to his clear impatience with the notion of tree "nurseries," which to him seems embarrassingly forgetful of that fungi are also living organisms with needs, like a plant-world version of androcentrism.

Many of my delights in the book were also in his attention to metaphor, which also serves him extremely well as a science writer and history-of-science writer. From the beginning, he pays close attention to how the metaphors used to describe fungi affect how they were seen and studied, from the conception of a "parasitic" partner in lichens, to the idea of symbiosis, to the idea of networks. He interrogates the terms used by contemporary scientists, such as "market" or "supply and demand," and also of the power of inverting expected metaphors, like when he calls a company that makes building material out of mycelium "the industrial equivalent of a Macrotermes termite mound," asks if yeasts domesticated US, or points out that the existence of in-plant fungi should trouble our understanding of what an individual plant is, or if one exists. Meanwhile, he is fully aware--and seems thrilled by--that it is impossible to do the work of science without metaphors. That we come to understanding via comparison doesn't seem to be a drawback, for Sheldrake... His enthusiasm for fungi, and for the study of fungi, seems only deepened by his sense that our understanding will be in constant revision. 

Sheldrake, in fact, so communicates his enthusiasms that when, at the end of the book, he states that he plans to make a beer out of pulping one of copies of the book (fermentation) and growing oysters on another, it's barely even a surprise. Of course he does. (And, per his Instagram, did.) This kind of excitement made him an excellent guy to spend time with, although I think it may have contributed to my least favorite parts of the book. There are moments where Sheldrake indulges, it seems to me, in a kind of grandiosity, most commonly at the beginning and endings of chapters. It's not, so much, that I don't think the subject deserves grandiosity, but that it sometimes seemed attached to personal anecdote, or taped onto a chapter to remind the reader there was a reason to keep reading about mushrooms. I don't know if it was an authorial choice or an editorial one, but it frequently made me roll my eyes. Please, sir! I am bought in! That said, it could be that after reading it once, I'd roll my eyes less, and just think happily to myself, Yes that's rightHow will the study of fungi expand our understanding of ourselves????? 

Finally, a few favorite factoids: 
  • Some lichens don't live on anything. They just blow around, like symbiotic tumbleweed
  • PENICILLIN WAS CROWDSOURCED
  • when fungi (Ophiocordyceps) take over ants it becomes up to forty percent of the ant's biomass BUT ISN'T IN THEIR BRAIN 

Ok I can't leave it there. Too horrible. 

I really liked the book, and I was honestly disappointed when I realized my foolishness about backmatter. More please!

第五年第七十三天

Wed, Mar. 25th, 2026 08:18 am
nnozomi: (Default)
[personal profile] nnozomi posting in [community profile] guardian_learning
部首
水 part 7
沟, ditch; 没, not; 沫, foam pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=85

词汇
对比, contrast; 对付, to deal with; 对于, about; 针对, in the light of pinyin )
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-4-word-list/

Guardian:
现在看来和海星鉴也没法沟通了, right now it seems like we can no longer communicate with the Haixing Bureau
这家伙明显和你不对付, this guy clearly isn't dealing with you

Me:
沟通比通沟更艰难。
你俩的对比很明显。
rionaleonhart: goes wrong: unparalleled actor robert grove looks handsomely at the camera. (unappreciated in my own time)
[personal profile] rionaleonhart
Yet more Robert/Chris Goes Wrong fanfiction! And, yet again, I have managed to sneak Robert banging Chris's mother in here. It's my favourite thing.


Title: The Verge
Fandom: The Goes Wrong Show
Rating: 14
Pairing: Robert/Chris, with some Robert/Celia
Wordcount: 3,500
Summary: Chris steels himself. “Do you ever feel something might... happen between us?”

The Verge )
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
(E: It's like watching TV in the olden days!)

and ended up with Young Sherlock.

Let me make my position on Young Sherlock absolutely clear: If Sherlock and Moriarty do not kiss and/or fuck by the end of this series, I will not be responsible for my actions.

*************************


Read more... )

Write every day! - March 2026 - Day 24

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 11:57 pm
zwei_hexen: Sketched feather with text: Write every day Ysilme Sylvanwitch (Default)
[personal profile] zwei_hexen
Lonely remote coastal road under a cloudy sky.

"Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better." Samuel Beckett

Tally:
Welcome post

Days 1-20 )
Day 21: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 22: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] glinda, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 23: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 24: [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] luzula

Let us know if we missed you or if you didn't check in for a while, so we can add you. Of course joining the fun is possible at any point.

~ ~ ~

[personal profile] ysilme here: alibi sentence only, but today for a fun reason: I've decided to participate at Back to Middle-earth Month 2026, and spent my writing time today with digging out my old Bingo cards, checking the numbers, and collecting ideas for prompts. B2MeM traditionally runs throughout March and has varied types of fanwork-creating events every year, but you also can just work with any of the older ideas, events or prompts. There have been two years of themed bingo cards, and part of this year's run is a daily calling of bingo numbers. I plan to write a few snippets, extended or deleted scenes depending on what comes up with the bingo cards I have in my stash, but not aiming at getting a bingo.

[personal profile] sylvanwitch here: About 211 words on "Dixon and the Detective."
lightofdaye: (Default)
[personal profile] lightofdaye
Title: Bouncing Back
Word Count: 4 x 100
Rating: PG-13
Characters & Pairing: James Sirius Potter/Zoe Chen (OFC), Fred Weasley II
Content: angst and fluff, friends to dating, oblivious James.
Disclaimer: The characters, settings and HP Franchise as a whole are owned by JKR and not by me. I make no profit from writing this piece of fanfiction.
Summary: Zoe wants to get James out and about again, it takes Freddie to point out the subtext.
A/n: Unbeta'd. Written for [community profile] hp_nextgen100's Prompt #348: "Pub". Sequel to Loud and Clear but stands on it own, if it stands at all, it didn't turn out quite how I wanted. Ah well.


Bouncing Back  )

Finished Starfleet Academy

Mon, Mar. 23rd, 2026 09:48 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
The moral of the last two episodes can be summed up as "never air live when you can air on a delay instead". Though I did find those chyrons for the show trial pretty amusing!

Read more... )

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Read more... )
brokenmnemonic: (Doom!)
[personal profile] brokenmnemonic posting in [community profile] vidukon_cardiff
Sign-ups for the VidUKon vidding workshop are now open! In keeping with the last couple of years we've arranged for the vidding workshop to occur in the months prior to the con, to allow everyone a bit more time for creating their individual segments (and for the mods to deal with the new and surprising technical problems that are now a VidUKon tradition).

What Is The VidUKon Vidding Workshop?

VidUKon runs a yearly workshop where participants create a vid that is stitched together from many small segments. Each segment is taken on by an individual or a group of vidders, without knowledge of what the other segments look like or what sources they used. Then, after the mods have stitched together the resulting chaos, the so-called "Frankenvid" is premiered at the end of the con to be enjoyed by all. You can watch previous Frankenvids here: https://www.youtube.com/@vidukon/videos

Sign-Ups

Every VidUKon participant can sign up for the vidding workshop until April 20th. Yes, that's the day after Premieres submissions closes, so that everyone working towards that deadline has a chance to sleep afterwards! Assignments will go out later that week.

By signing up, you are committing to creating one segment of the Frankenvid using at least 2 different sources. The length of the segments depends on the number of sign-ups, but is typically between 10-20 seconds.

When signing up to the workshop, you'll be asked to make a decision on the following points:

* Group signup vs. individual signup

* Preference for song segment

* Source selection

* Pinch hitting

Please note that to participate in the Vidding Workshop, you must have a registration for VidUKon 2026 - so if you want to join in, purchase your Virtual or Birmingham Attendee membership here: https://vidukon.org/

On Signing Up As A Group

While it's perfectly fine to sign up to the workshop and create your segment as an individual, we would like to encourage people to form groups in the spirit of allowing less experienced vidders (or even participants with no previous vidding experience!) to dip their toes into the vidding process and join in on the fun in a low-stakes setting. To that end, there are two ways for people to participate as a group:

You can organize your own group ahead of time, then choose one representative to fill in the sign-up form for the whole group.

You can sign up individually, but indicate that you want to be assigned to a group. We will do our best to group people together who live in similar timezones, to make collaboration between the group members easier. The mods can also help establish contact between the group members in case there are any difficulties.

In both cases, please be aware that we will not organize spaces for the groups to communicate with each other. You will have to decide amongst yourselves how to work together to create your segment, whether that be a 3-hour screen-sharing session on Discord, or a project file being emailed back and forth over the course of several weeks, or something else completely. It's up to you!

Song Choice

The song for the Frankenvid is chosen by the mods, and will not be revealed before assignments are sent out. (Part of the reason for that is that the song choice depends on the number of participants, but of course it's also meant to add to the challenge and general chaos of the process...)

While you can't choose your segment, the sign-up form has an option to indicate whether you prefer a segment with or without lyrics. We will do our best to take everyone's preference into account when assigning the segments.

Source Selection

When signing up, you'll be asked to specify the sources you will use for your segment. This is to ensure that we won't have excessive overlap between the segments. If other individuals/groups have already picked the same source, you may be asked by the mods to pick something else, or to pick a specific season etc.

The number of sources you use is up to you, but it should be at least 2 different ones. Any visual source is fine to use, so please feel free to think outside the box! If you want to change your sources at any point during the process, please let the mods know right away, and we can figure something out.

Alternatively, for those who want a particular challenge or a particularly chaotic time you can select to be assigned sources by the mods. When doing so, you can indicate a "difficulty level" of sources you want to be assigned. The higher the difficulty, the more unusual the source you'll receive; past random assignments have included Lego stop-motion vids, adverts, and puppet shows.

Rendering Guidelines

The final render of the Frankenvid will use the following technical format: mp4, H264, widescreen (1920:1080 aspect ratio), 23.976 fps

We are aware that wrangling a bunch of different visual sources into this format can be a technical challenge. In order to avoid us mangling your vision, please do already submit your segment in widescreen aspect ratio. Whether you want to crop your vid or letterbox it to fit that aspect ratio is up to you.

For selecting the framerate, please follow these guidelines:

If all your sources have the same framerate, please render your segment at that native framerate (e.g. if you use two British tv shows at 25fps, please render at 25fps)
If your sources have different framerates, please render your segment at the highest framerate of those sources (e.g. if you have one movie source with 23.976fps, and one youtube video with 60fps, render at 60fps)

The technical reason for this, if you are interested, is that I will likely have to change the framerate of your segment anyways, and having the most possible frames available makes it easier for me to fix any mistakes (i.e. double frames) that might occur in the conversion.

For those of you who are very comfortable handling different framerates, you may also render your segment down to the final 23.976fps yourself, but in that case I would ask that you please check to make sure you did not create any repeated frames in the process.

Please check with the mods early if you are planning to use a source that has a lower framerate than 23.976 (i.e. stop motion).

If you have any trouble with rendering your segment, please contact us directly via vidukon@gmail.com so we can figure it out together.

On Content And Visual Effects

We want the Vidding Workshop to be a fun and rewarding experience for all participants. To that end, please use your best judgment on what kind of content and visual effects to use, and avoid any obviously triggering content (e.g. police brutality) or heavy visual effects like strobing, stutter cuts etc. which might cause adverse physical reactions. While the Frankenvid will have a list of content warnings like any other vid shown at VidUKon, we also want to do our best to make sure that all participants are able to watch the finished product without discomfort.

If you have any questions about this or additional accessibility concerns, please contact the mods as early as possible. We are happy to make accommodations.

Submission Deadline And Pinch Hits

When assignments go out, you will be provided with a link where you can upload your finished segment. The submission deadline is May 10th. Please be aware that any segments that haven't been uploaded by May 4th end of day will be considered a default and sent out as pinch hits immediately. If life gets in the way and you can't finish your segment in time, please get in contact with us as early as possible.

When submitting, you are also required to provide a text file containing the following information: Sources used, Vidders, Content warnings. For the content warnings, the same rules apply as when submitting a vid to any other VidUKon vidshow.

During sign-up, you can choose to be put on the pinch hitter list. Pinch hitters will not be required to use the same sources as the original assignment.

Timeline & Sign-up Form

Sign-ups close: April 20, 2026
Assignments go out: April 27, 2026 (or earlier)
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Spring! Spring! And a penguin

Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 08:12 pm
nineveh_uk: Illustration that looks like Harriet Vane (Default)
[personal profile] nineveh_uk
Well it was for a few days. But it is the nature of spring to be fickle, so I shall endure the appearance of equinoctial gales and hope that the cherries don't blossom until later in the week or it will disappear in the closest thing to a blizzard of this winter. I have been failing to write a post because I should be writing about seeing Peter Grimes (brilliant, very dramatic), or more Olympics, or visiting my parents, or reading A Month in the Country (rich and lovely) and it has not happened. Admittedly having a cold has not helped. And I certainly don't want to try to think of something to say about geopolitics.

So when I was reminded of the existence of this song/vid, I thought, I should post that. It is very relatable, literally and metaphorically. Who has never been the penguin who doesn't want to get out of his futon?

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Tue, Mar. 24th, 2026 02:53 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
Dear Pay Dirt,
My husband and I are fortunate enough to be homeowners with pretty good credit. We get credit card and loan offers in the mail all the time. I’ve been trying to declutter our house, and junk mail is a big issue. Everything goes on the entry way table and its always overflowing. I set up a recycle bin in the entry way for just such physical spam, but my husband won’t use it because he says we have to SHRED all those offers, and our shredder is not big enough to deal with all the constant clutter! Also, the shredder is in his office, and he only gets to it every other month or so, so the workflow doesn’t keep up.

I know that’s the best, most secure way to deal with junk. But really, our recycle bin is kept in the garage until the night before the garbage is collected., then we roll it out to the curb. We always put other recycling on top of the mail.

Is it really that dangerous to just toss those mailers as is? Maybe tear them up by hand first? Please help!
—Drowning in Junk Mail


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