Banned Books Week | Celebrating the Freedom to Read: Sept. 30 – Oct. 6, 2012

What, you haven’t honored your freedom by reading a banned book this week? Banned Books Week | Celebrating the Freedom to Read Similar:Sparklecleaver the PonyswordCorrections – December 30 – NYTimes.com….AmusingCommentary: The unbearable smugness of the pressMore on how their desire to control the …CultureAn Academic Conference Where YOU are the Hero: Interactive Fiction in Print…

Angry 10yo Edits the Paper Heart She Gave Her Mother

Similar:Journalism is now the second draft of historyThe unavoidable truth is that first draf…CultureBlender 3D UpdateHoly ray-tracing, Batman, it’s a Blender…AestheticsI rather like my camera. Bought a new zoom lens a few months ago.PersonalWhat’s an environmental issue? — Gus SpethI don’t know the provenance of this quot…CultureThoughtful analysis of how the tension, shot choices, and…

Yes, it’s happening here at Seton Hill. Quidditch.

  Similar:Charlie Brown has his kite-eating tree. I have my keys-eating chair. #foundthem PersonalThe Onion's Supreme Court Briefing on Satire Is StunningFrom October: A man who was arrested ov…AmusingIn Defense of Liking ThingsIt used to bother me that people got all…CultureYou have 20 minutes before the sun blows upThis charming game focuses on exploring …AestheticsCarolyn will…

Journalism Warning Labels

Stick these on a copy of your future birdcage liner if you spot any of the many sins of journalism. Be on the lookout for bias, plagiarism, poor sourcing, and hype. Journalism Warning Labels « Tom Scott. Similar:Twenty-Six Old Characters, The (1947)Sheaffer Pen celebrates the art of writi…AestheticsGil Gerard (1943-2025) I built a model of…

Kids Play the Way Scientists Work

Toddlers, multiple experiments have shown, can test hypotheses about how machines work—for example, they can figure out which blocks made a machine play when some but not all blocks trigger the toy. We have to be careful, though. This exploratory, quasi-scientific approach to the world doesn’t last if adults teach kids to do something else: Kids will let adult…

The Writing Revolution

When a failing high school tries to reinvent itself, it turns to writing — with amazing results. At my own high school, our science teacher was a retired nuclear submarine admiral who used to say, “Give me students who can read and write, and I can teach them to pilot a nuclear submarine.” So I’m…

Winky Winky Drudge Report

The Drudge Report today features an amusing array of images — Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, Hilary Clinton, and Russian President Vladimir Putin — all of them winking. Clearly the nonverbal message is that all these people — who are unpopular with the conservative populist base to which Matt Drudge caters — are working together. The…

Passing On a Torch

I recently introduced my kids to “The City on the Edge of Forever.” Here’s another dad, writing about introducing his kids to classic Star Trek. But they aren’t just younger versions of me; they pick up on stuff I didn’t at their age.  After a few episodes, The Girl asked “why don’t the girls get…

A Hazard Of New Fortunes: On Bernstein’s ‘Attack Of The Difficult Poems’

Bernstein recognizes the affect that difficulty first releases — anxiety, reluctance, the deep breath as one gathers resolve to do something difficult, such as read a poem known for its difficulty. His performance includes several masks, switching the impression to a generic Dr. Phil (“Difficult poems are not like this because of something you as…

A few Dwarven Moments in Stage Right’s Snow White

The dwarf scenes were a real hoot. Below is a shot of me as Brandybuck, the crabby 2nd-eldest dwarf. It was a genius move to put some of the funniest lines into this iconic death scene.   Similar:The Miller of the Dee; by James Baldwin; read by Dennis JerzI showed up at the recording studio…

Elderly woman who botched religious fresco demands royalties – Telegraph

The elderly Spanish woman who ruined a religious fresco with her botched restoration is now demanding royalties from her work after it became an unlikely tourist attraction. An internet petition to keep the repair job garnered widespread support and seizing an opportunity to swell its coffers, the church began levying a 4 euro (£3) entrance…