queen_ypolita: Camila Grey playing the keyboard at Adam Lambert gig at Heaven (Cam_Heaven by wenchpixie)
queen_ypolita ([personal profile] queen_ypolita) wrote2025-06-20 09:54 pm
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Music tonight

I went to listen to the Reading Festival Chorus perform Elgar's Dream of Gerontius tonight. I'm not sure if I'd gone it if had been just them, but they were joined by Johanneskantorei and a youth choir from Düsseldorf (Reading is twinned with Düsseldorf) and Britain Sinfonietta, so I was curious, and the location was convenient. So I booked a ticket. And it was worth hearing, although it seemed to me the ratio of performers to audience was probably at least 2 to 1, if not more. It probably wasn't the best evening for a concert: today has been rather sweltering again and the venue doesn't come with any other method of controlling the temperature apart from opening the doors. It wasn't uncomfortably hot but not still not great.
scaramouche: Bruce Boxleitner as Alan from Tron (tron: alan is a nerd)
Annie D ([personal profile] scaramouche) wrote2025-06-20 03:44 pm

The Devil's Plan (& Genius Game UK)

Partway through watching The Devil's Plan season 1, I did a quick search on youtube for TDP-related content to get an idea if TDP is/was popular. The algorithm fed me a video by [youtube.com profile] TaranArmstrong commentating over Genius Game, a UK version of the original The Genius, which I forgot existed but at least knew existed at all because David Tennant is the "host". (Not really, he's in prerecorded video footage explaining the games and tallying results, but he's not physically there to host.)

I watched bits of Taran's videos and really enjoyed his commentary! He has a good handle on strategy and figuring out game mechanics to explain them in ways that I can understand (a blessing!), plus he has a good grip on the social aspects of the game. Most important though, I think, is that Taran's enthusiasm is nice and he gets invested in a fun-to-watch way, with good humour, and it's fun to see him so critical of Genius Game's mostly wishy-washy players and the UK audience's dislike of complicated games. The reason the algo fed me his videos is because he mentions that he loved TDP season 1 and wants to do commentary over TDP season 2. He couldn't upload the videos to youtube, so he put them on patreon instead, so I figured hey, once I started watching TDP season 2, I can intersperse that with his commentary videos.

TDP season 2 I think starts strong, there's a good selection of contestants, some of whom are well familiar with board games and/or card games, and the showrunners changed the format up where instead of two players going to prison at the end of every main match, half the players would go there, and instead of a prize match that all the non-prison players have to play to get prize money, there's a death match where all the prison players have to play to survive. Plus because the thing about season 1 was the hidden prison game, both sets of players immediately get on trying to figure out the hidden games in both areas, which are found pretty early in the season.

Unfortunately as the season went on, the flaw in the overall game design had an accumulative effect, and I found myself enjoying the show less and less, and ended up mostly (though not always) watching Taran's commentaries instead of the actual episodes. I bailed entirely in episode 10 of 12. I might go back, I might not, but it's just not fun anymore.

Cut the rest for length. )
queen_ypolita: Woman in a Mucha painting (Mucha by auctrix_icons)
queen_ypolita ([personal profile] queen_ypolita) wrote2025-06-19 07:36 pm
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Spent some time on wheelbarrow duty

I did a volunteering day arranged by work's charity foundation with The Conservation Volunteers at Horsenden Hill. I've been there a couple of times before, and on those occasions we'd had a reasonably big group. This time it was only about 12 of us. The number of people signed up was a bit higher only a few days ago, so perhaps people were put off by the very warm weather forecast. And it was warm, but our day was planned accordingly, and we finished earlier than we would have done if it had been less warm. The group I was in cleared out some vegetation off a path next to some pigs, laid down some woodchip on the path (hence the wheelbarrow), and sorted through some pallets and other pieces of wood into re-useable and recyclable. So we got something done, but it was certainly getting uncomfortably warm towards the end. But it was fun to be outside and do something different for a day.
scaramouche: Sticker "Hello, my name is: FUCK YOU" (fuck you hello)
Annie D ([personal profile] scaramouche) wrote2025-06-19 05:50 pm

Book Log: Targeted

I picked up Brittany Kaiser's Targeted: My Inside Story of Cambridge Analytica and How Trump, Brexit and Facebook Broke Democracy when it first came out in paperback a handful of years ago, but hadn't read it because, well, I figured it'd be stressful. And it is stressful to read, which I have just done, considering where the world has gone since the first Trump election! But I think it worked out in the end because the book is already dated, and that helps to put some things in perspective in how facebook is no longer the powerhouse it once was, and our understanding of Big Data and data protection has evolved somewhat.

So Kaiser was an employee and eventual whistleblower of Cambridge Analytica (CA), I think it's quite widely known now how CA used Big Data to develop highly detailed psychographics of US voters to manipulate them in the 2016 election, especially towards the goal of voter suppression. What the book does is provide Kaiser's understanding of the timeline of events plus the details of the wheeling and dealing of players behind the scenes who were funding and/or moving money around, plus how the data was scraped and hidden in the first place (like, I knew all those facebook quizzes were part of data scraping and psychological profiling, but reading about it is still upsetting). But Kaiser says she had no hand in the data herself, since she was mostly pitching customers towards signing a contract before handing off to the operations team.

Since Kaiser didn't handle data herself I didn't get what I would've loved to know more about, which is how manipulation happens, beyond Kaiser's description of customized advertisments to incite anger and fake grassroots movements, but we knew that already. The psychology of it is interesting, and I would've liked deeper analysis of how to process news in a noisy world, and of the psychological and societal consequences we're still living in. But that's not the point of the memoir, and Kaiser's main emphasis is the attempt to redeem herself for her role in CA by focusing on data protection moving forward, which feels at this point a little horse-out-of-barn situation, but that doesn't mean we can't become more conscious of our online safety and support legislation to better protect everyone's privacy. (Facebook also being a case study of new social media being the wild wild west and allowing such abuse because no one knew what to protect themselves from.)

Plus when I say the book is dated, I'm also specifically referring to how Kaiser's exit strategy to get out of CA was to join the blockchain community.👀
queen_ypolita: Woman in a Mucha painting (Mucha by auctrix_icons)
queen_ypolita ([personal profile] queen_ypolita) wrote2025-06-18 06:55 pm
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Wednesday reading

Finished since the last reading post
Nothing. I didn't expect to read much while my mum and sister were around and I didn't.

Currently reading
The Blunders of Our Governments by Anthony King and Iwor Crewe. It's now over 10 years old and I think that shows, which is not unexpected—some of these kinds of things will take time to clearly display themselves as blunders. I don't think anyone reading about the state of Thames Water today would consider the privatisation as successful as it might have seemed even ten years ago.

Reading next
Not sure
queen_ypolita: Woman in a Mucha painting (Mucha by auctrix_icons)
queen_ypolita ([personal profile] queen_ypolita) wrote2025-06-16 07:10 pm
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Weekend with visitors

After finishing work on Thursday, I then spent a couple of hours hoovering, making beds, and dealing with a mountain of washing up before I headed out to the airport to meet my mum and sister. It was quite late when we all got back to my place and I don't think any of us slept particularly well. I had guessed as much and hadn't planned anything except chatting and unpacking for the morning. We had lunch at home and then we travelled to Oxford for the afternoon. The main event I'd planned was having afternoon tea at the Ashmolean rooftop restaurant, as afternoon tea had been one of my mum's requests for this trip. It was gorgeously sunny and the afternoon tea was delicious. We also did a little bit of browsing in the shops afterwards but it was just about too warm for that to be enjoyable.

On Saturday, we went to Windsor and visited the castle. None of us have any major interest in the royal family, but it was something to see and do somewhere that was relatively easy to get to. We also had lunch and did some little shopping.

Yesterday, we walked over to the university campus and spent some time wandering around in the Harris garden there, before taking the bus to town, doing a little bit of shopping and having lunch. Mum was initially a bit wary about the walking plans—her operated knee isn't always that co-operative—but she found it OK.

This morning, I saw them to the bus stop for the coach to the airport and then made my way to the office. Apparently, the coach journey and the first flight went fine, but checking up on things from afar, it seems their second flight ended up being a little delayed, so it'll be late before they're at home tonight.
scaramouche: Kim Cattrall as Gracie Law (gracie law creepy eyes)
Annie D ([personal profile] scaramouche) wrote2025-06-16 01:05 pm
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Chucky (TV)

I have finished Chucky season 2, what a fun time! Not a strong start for me, because I found the season's set-up of Jake, Lexy and Devon getting sent to a Catholic boarding school in lieu of going to juvie somewhat hackneyed, plus I don't care much for the use of Christian symbols and themes in this particular franchise, but then! Character work! (Which I'd missed at the end of season 1.) Jake and Devon get to have character-driven conflict! Devon gets to be angry and express it! Jake is distracted by his own guilt! Lexy gets crunchy emotional stuff with her addiction and via their friendship with the new adorable character of Nadine! Yum yum yum.

So it's all about being orphans and the fallout of when parents let their kids down. The first three Child's Play movies were entirely about this: traumatized children who are not believed or protected by their parents/guardians, so the show coming back to that and setting it in a Catholic institution is a bit too on the nose for me, but I did very much enjoy the trio getting to fully mirror Andy and Kyle's experience as children lost in the system and eventual turning to violence in order to find meaning (violence against Chucky, but violence all the same), and that mirror going all the way to the finale where everyone gets their catharsis, and Andy and Kyle gaze upon on the trio and are glad that at least they get to grow up without the fear of Chucky hanging over them.

Which is why I wish the show ended right there, with that oh so satisfying win. That was a great murder of Chucky that Andy did! (Were his gunshots meant to mirror how Chucky was shot to death in the first Child's Play, only Andy is his own hero now?) Episode 7 is such a banger, and allowing everyone to vocalize their fears and regrets just gives so much emotional weight around the horror camp elements, what a great balance.

But this being a horror franchise and the show having been renewed, that's not the end and the trio get to be traumatized some more. :(

Other stuff:
  • The absurdity of Devon Sawa returning to the show as a brand new character after being killed off twice in season 1 is fantastic. I also think I laughed the hardest at the prep montage where Father Bryce changed his cassock solely to show off his abs.

  • Good Chucky was such a fun little gimmick and, besides being fun in itself, I like how it informed Jake's grappling with his own guilt and projecting his hopes that if one of the Chuckys could be redeemed, maybe Jake can, too. Brad Dourif's voice work with Good Chucky is phenomenal. I cared less for the other two Chucky variants, though.

  • Lexy's little sister Caroline was so much more interesting in the season opener, and I was bummed that we didn't get much more of her, though it looks like she might have a bigger role in season 3. (Unless the show is going to further push how young their victims can be.)

  • Jennifer Tilly was way more delightful this season, I think because having Tiffany at odds with Chucky is just more interesting for longer arcs, plus the very fascinating tonal dissonance between her being charming and having her own insecurities, while at the same time doing such monstrous things to Nica and, as revealed this season, Chuckyverse!Jennifer Tilly.

  • Sadly, I did not care for Glen and Glenda. It felt like Mancini had trapped himself with the vague ending of Seed of Chucky, and the machinations to get the twins out of the way felt more contrived than anything else. I think my main issue is that I could not buy Glen and Glenda's characterization as relatively normal teenagers despite having been raised by goddamned Tiffany Valentine.

  • The meta episode where Gina Gershon, Joe Pantoliano, etc. were at Tiffany's house for the twins' birthday, is a fun gimmick but some of the gags were a bit much, a bit too Seed of Chucky for me. Loved seeing Meg Tilly, though!
  • .
  • Sister Catherine as a legitimately normal and kind character really grounded the season. Same goes for the sincerity of emotions in the Christmas finale between the trio and Lexy's mom. You need that sincerity when there's OTT horror-comedy going on everywhere else, plus the breath of fresh air that is an adult who does want to protect the kids and listen to them.

  • Freddie Lounds! Okay well, it's Lara Jean Chorostecki as Sister Ruth, a bit part that I WISH was bigger because, what a weird character who's so hungry for praise and to feel special, that she could've been pulled into the Chucky conspiracy but her quirkiness only ended up maneuvering her into becoming fodder.

  • Nadine is a great new character, what a great actress, and I'm glad they added her in to give someone for Lexy to bond with, though I did say out loud at two different points, "Oh she's a goner." And then... yeah.

  • Nica, sadly, I feel was kind of just... there. I think this is an unfortunately natural progression from her role in season 1, where she's cordoned off from the other storylines and trapped with Tiffany. I wonder also if this is a consequence of her two movies (Curse and Cult) being straight up horror, and the aftermath of that leaving her in a situation so awful that there's no place for levity, let alone relief. The only connections she makes are with the twins, and later Andy and Kyle, but they're so brief and don't break her out of her (and her story's) isolation. The status quo finally ends in season 2 with her freedom, so I'm hopeful for more interesting things for her to do in the next season.
scaramouche: The temple door symbol from Steven Universe (su - temple door)
Annie D ([personal profile] scaramouche) wrote2025-06-15 10:07 am

The Devil's Plan (& The Genius)

While casually browsing Netflix for something that could be playable out in the open while repairmen go around the house, I saw a Korean reality/game show The Devil's Plan. I clicked it and after a while went huh, the game vibes are similar to The Genius, which I very much enjoyed a few years ago. So I looked it up and oh, there's a creative team overlap, that makes sense!

So The Devil's Plan, although it opens melodramatically, it is almost the same format as The Genius in that there's complicated board-type games to play, and there is an accumulative currency ("pieces" in TDP, garnets in The Genius) gained through games that confers survival and other benefits in the long term. But the major difference between the two is that The Genius was played one day a week over multiple weeks, while The Devil's Plan is played continuously over a week while the players live together in the set over that time Big Brother style.

I wonder if what happened is that the makers of The Genius got the idea from seeing how some of the players (primarily season 2 onwards, is my impression) organically met up for dinner after recording sessions, where they socialised without game stress, analysed the games they just played, and worked out feelings that might have accumulated on-camera. I think I remember some of the players mentioning that some production staff joined them for those dinners as well, and from there maybe someone got the idea that these off-game sessions could be part of the show itself. Plus the shorter timeline really amps up the intensity of the game relationships and does not give the players true breaks to recover regular headspace.

I think it's really interesting that TDP season 1 isn't as cutthroat intense the way I remember season 2 and 3 of The Genius being, which you'd assume it would be considering that all the players MUST have watched The Genius and other similar shows beforehand. It might be the choice of the players themselves, but the show format itself has two games a day, where one game match has the players competing against each other, and another game that they have to win collectively, and the teamwork of that second game counters negative feelings that might have come out from the regular match. I liked that, I thought it was very clever! I also wonder if the living-in format also reduces drama since players have to spend ALL their time with each other, and Korean social community rules guide them into working out peaceable solutions.

Cut for The Devil's Plan season 1 winner spoilers. )
queen_ypolita: A stack of leather-covered books next to an hourglass (ClioBooks by magic_art)
queen_ypolita ([personal profile] queen_ypolita) wrote2025-06-11 05:44 pm
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Wednesday reading

Finished since the last reading post
Heaven on Earth, with lots of beautiful photos and other illustrations, and a brief history of the construction process of each cathedral included. Short chapters made it easy to read one chapter at a time, but on the whole, it was a bit bulky and heavy to hold.

Embers by Sándor Márai in Carol Brown Janeway's English translation of the German translation (the translator's name not included in the English edition) of the Hungarian original. That was something of a surprise to me, for the English edition to be a translation of a translation rather than of the original text. For about the first half, I rather enjoyed what seemed to be a slow build-up to a significant moment, but for the second half, I was getting increasingly irritated by what seemed to be a life wasted on getting hung up on something he was pretty sure had happened but he wasn't going to discuss, until now, but not really even now. The title did seem rather appropriate.

Currently reading
Nothing, so I obviously need to pick up something new.

Reading next
As above, at least I've got a few options on my shelves. I'm not sure how much reading I'll do over the next few days as my mum and sister are coming to visit.
egret: egret in Harlem Meer (Default)
egret ([personal profile] egret) wrote2025-06-11 01:53 am

Recent reading

A Spoonful of Murder by J. M. Hall - A delightful cozy mystery about a group of retired school teachers in England who meet for coffee once a week and solve murders. In this one they are told that their also retired former principal died from an unfortunate dementia-related medication mistake, but they have their doubts! This is the first one in the series and I look forward to more. 

The Quest for Annie Moore by Megan Smolenyak - Smolenyak is a celebrity in genealogy-world. Her latest is a deep dive into the story of the first immigrant to land at Ellis Island. Smolenyak looked into the records supporting the life story of Annie Moore and discovered gaps and misidentifications. This book is the story of her years of extensive research to correctly identify this impoverished Irish immigrant and trace her life. (Spoiler: Moore spent the rest of her life on the Lower East Side in NYC.) I read it for the Virtual Genealogy Society online book club and I really enjoyed it. I think anyone interested in immigrant genealogy would enjoy it. But it really is about the adventure and thrill of tracking down elusive records, especially since much of the research was done before so much was digitized. So maybe not for the general reader. But the book club discussion was very lively and threatened to run over the time! 

Dead Man's Grave by Neil Lancaster - First volume in a police procedural series set in Scotland. It started out really great with a blood-feud-based murder but sort of trailed off into gangster-related corruption in the police force. I don't know that I will continue with the series because I found the Scots accent very hard to follow in the audiobook. This is a personal failing -- I always find Scots accents hard to follow. I suppose I could read with my eyes but I don't care that much about police and their supposed nobility. 

Lies Bleeding by Ben Aaronovitch - This is the 6th Rivers of London book. I do really love these but might take a little break because spoiler )

Currently reading: Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. I want to like it but it's uphill. Maybe it will pick up. I wish I had not started reading her autiobiography and learned what a rightwing eugenicist she was because now I am biased against her. (Reading it as part of my Feminist Science Fiction open source anthology project.)
scaramouche: Kevin Tran and Sam Winchester from Supernatural (samkevin pew)
Annie D ([personal profile] scaramouche) wrote2025-06-11 09:02 am
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