Everyone Nov 1

Similar:Whoops, I Accidentally Used a Photo of Donald Trump in this Blog Post on Richard IIIHum de dum. Not paying any attention to …CultureThe Girl's Obsession with Scottish History ContinuesWife: “What did you do with your bedshee…AestheticsAlphabet in Motion: How Letters Get Their Shape: pop-up book by Kelli AndersonA fascinating concept. (Thanks for the s…AestheticsWe…

Online dating is a method of virus control

I first met my wife in person, but we were in a long-distance online relationship for a year, and some weeks are so busy we text each other more than we speak in person. Starting a relationship during a pandemic would be tricky. Similar:Taking Harassment Seriously Requires Serious DistinctionsEditor and columnist Jonah Goldberg ques…CultureTrump's reference…

Flannery O’Connor reading “A Good Man is Hard to Find”

It’s striking to hear her audience erupt in laughter at the comedy bits in the opening scenes. I assume they didn’t know what they were in for!   Similar:Why No One Clicked on the Great Hypertext StoryIt’s not that hypertext went on to becom…CultureMelissa Terras' Blog: Male, Mad and Muddleheaded: Academics in Children's Picture BooksLabcoats,…

Essential Journalists: How Coronavirus Changed TV News

https://youtu.be/CWcEABVWbfA Similar:Canadians Love Poop, Americans Love Pizza: How Emojis Fare Worldwide The company SwiftKey analyzed more tha…AestheticsSummer Project: Responsive Web DesignI spent more time than I’d like to admit…AestheticsHow are you holding up? What difficult choices have you made? How can we all help each oth…Carolyn and were recently cast in a hist…CultureHarvard revokes admission…

COVID-19 Becoming Less Deadly

Bits and pieces from a news article that summarizes recent scholarly studies. Some  moderately good news, and a reminder that increased testing means finding more cases, and finding them earlier, which means people get medical treatment sooner. (More testing means less suffering and fewer deaths. For those of us who care about such things.) Over…

Epilogue to Rossum’s Universal Robots

My big finish as Alquist in a Zoom-based production of R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots). Similar:'History has treated her badly': Hamnet and the 400-year-old mystery around Shakespeare's …Anyone seen “Hamnet”? I was not too i…CultureThere Is A Difference Between Middle Grade and Young Adult Lit, and It Does Matter Adolescence took a long time to be inven…BooksThose…

Dennis G. Jerz | Associate Professor of English -- New Media Journalism, Seton Hill University | jerz.setonhill.edu Logo

In October, 2000, I was blogging about bobbed hair, Woolf, a CFP for interactive fiction scholarship, the hyphen in e-mail, and a book with glow-in-the-dark pages

In October 2000, I was blogging about The F. Scott Fitzgerald Short story “Bernice Bobs Her Hair” (background; full text) A biography of Virginia Woolf The precarious status of English as a global language A call for papers for a special issue of Text Technology devoted to interactive fiction (I have a copy on my shelf…

Cameras and Masks: Sustaining Emotional Connections with Your Students in an Age of COVID19

There are some sound pedagogical reasons for turning cameras on. Thus, I suggest sharing those reasons with the students before giving them the choice of what to do about their cameras. Explain why you are making your request. For example, being able to see students’ faces gives instructors a quick and easy way to discern whether students are finding the material engaging, at least in smaller classes. One instructor told me that “I asked students to turn their cameras on to say hi to their classmates at the beginning and end of class, and those were the best moments of the class.”

Topics in Am Lit: August Wilson — Online J-Term course starts Dec 16.

Similar:Just a handful more of these elegant #steampunk control panels and I can move on to the ne…AestheticsThis is manageable. Far better than some semesters.This is manageable. Far better than some…PersonalSupport the arts in your community!PersonalRespect the Text: Teaching Textual Primacy to Non-English MajorsIn the past, I have used the first day o…AcademiaA snifter of…

Performing as Alquist in ActIII of Rossum’s Universal Robots. (Free Zoom performance of ground-breaking 1920 play that coined the word “Robot”.)

  Similar:Happy Father’s Day One of my favorite pictures of my fa…Current_EventsHad a blast watching all the amazing entries in Pittsburgh's 48 Hour Film Festival, b…PersonalQuick visit to see my mother and siblings.AestheticsIt's probably safe to throw these out.PersonalHow Not To Make Professional ContactsTowards the end of my year-long radio ne…AmusingDress rehearsal for Mamma Mia.…

Really enjoyed Prime Stage Theater’s video presentation of Mockingbird.

Obviously I would have preferred to see it live, but the pandemic-era video presentation — with clever graphics that indicate stage actions and pop-up text that augment the recorded performances — was subtle and touching. Similar:Journalists prefer plain language.AestheticsAll of Your Co-Workers are Gone: Story, Substance, and the Empathic PuzzlerHowever, running parallel to the evoluti…AcademiaBeautiful…

I just picked up both Aslan's How and Cair Paravel. #narnia #monopoly

Similar:Carolyn, Easter 2017 PersonalA new headshot for the girl.PersonalIf you win the very first time you play a game, that means you are skilled and brilliant, …AwesomeChristmas 1970. I was feverish and it was unseasonably warm outside. One of my favorite pi…PersonalBeautiful. No Data / Lore opposition required. AestheticsAnother 10 sq cm of #steampunk control panel.…

Destroying trust in the media, science, and government has left America vulnerable to disaster

From The Brookings Institution (non-profit, deeply sourced factual writing; has been accused of both conservative and liberal bias; is cited in Congress about equally by conservative and liberal politicians; leans a bit left in terms of loaded language): American institutions are not perfect, of course. We all should want to improve scientific practices, remove bias…

IT CAN’T HAPPEN HERE — Berkeley Rep audio production

Sinclair Lewis’s 1935 anti-fascist novel adapted for radio by Berkeley Rep. Similar:Dress Rehearsal for "My Son Pinocchio"My wife, daughter, and I waiting to star…AmusingWhat's next in game narrative, with Emily Short Something that I tended to think was…CultureI just had some fun spotting a possible source of the word "dongle" (the plug-in security …The word…