sundries

Nov. 5th, 2009 10:04 am
[personal profile] rm
  • Patty has been experimenting with heirloom beans. Last night she made some which, hand to god, taste like baked potatoes with a hint of bacon. Sadly, the texture of beans still squicks me deep into my soul.

  • [livejournal.com profile] supergee is offering a scholarship to this years ICFA. Any over-21 PoC who cannot get university funding to attend ICFA is eligible. This includes airefare, hotel share, conference entrance and meals. More info at his journal.

  • Pets can get the hamthrax!

  • CNN asks if you could become a celebrity stalker.

  • New York's women-only residences.

  • Wait, wait, WHUT? There's a former Miss California "opposite marriage" Carrie Prejean sex tape?

  • Waters of Mars! Annoyingly this is airing in the UK when I am in Zurich, and I'm not sure how I'm going to manage to see it, as I'm missing the DWNY viewing gathering. Actually, can anyone get this video to play past the first ten seconds? Anyone have a better link?

  • Girl Number 9: I'm currently a day behind. So far my verdict is Day 1 = awesome; Day 2 = terrible; Day 3 = good energy, but I don't care. The thing continues to interest me for form and participants, but it's not really my bag. I'm curious if it will pull out something interesting for us in the end. As [livejournal.com profile] copperbadge so smartly said, it really is a cross between Law & Order and Saw. I loathe the mere existence of Saw.

  • Time for a funny story: A few days ago, someone who is in the same fandom as me, and therefore knows or at least meets some of the people who work professionally in that canon, was twittering about posting a new story of hers featuring a character with the same first name as a pro I know. Based on the places I thought she said she was going to post it, I assumed it was RPF about this guy that I'm friends with. Now, I'm totally pro-RPF, but you know, if I saw that, I wouldn't be able to un-see it, and I don't want to think of the dude that way, so despite curiosity, I was resolutely ignoring the issue and even stopped myself from asking her about it. EVENTUALLY, I ran across the fic by accident. It totally was NOT about the guy I know, but a fictional Torchwood character and a gerbil or a hamster or something! When you assume, kids, you make an ass out of U and ME. That's the lesson for today.

  • So, the new V series. First, confession. I went to college thinking I wanted to be a war reporter because I had convinced myself of that back while watching V when I was twelve and thinking that character Mike Donovan was just the bomb.

    Anyway, it's not bad. It's not really good either. Alan Tudyk's Q rating must be off the charts. He's so funny looking, but I watch him and I smile.

    I thought the show did a great job of punching the emotional "aliens have arrived and this is what you've always dreamed of" buttons. I hate, as much as I expected, that they've changed the WWII allegory to post-9/11 stuffs. But even more than that, omg, can we not call the Visitors "the V's?" First it's confusing if you also watch True Blood where "V" is vampire blood taken as a drug. Secondly, it has an ugly, awkward cadence. Third, the first time the V gets spray-painted in the original series that means something. But, oh yeah, right, the Resistance metaphors have all been changed. *sigh*

  • Meanwhile, out in the real world, there's this serial killer situation in Ohio. I feel like it's been getting less media attention than past serial killer things, and I'm curious about in this in a "race in the media" way as the perp and the known victims (only one has been identified so far, and only some of the bodies were recent enough to be demographically identifiable) turn out to be African American. Conventional wisdom says that black serial killers are really rare (this may not be true, however, as a Google on the subject brings up webpages about a ton of different serial killers all listed as "the only known black serial killer"), but while supposed rarity often excites the media, that seems, unsurprisingly, not to be true when it comes to race. I've never worked a crime beat though, but I know some of you have. If anyone can shed light on whether this coverage is as different as I think it is, I'd be interested.

  • Via [livejournal.com profile] reannon: Apparently women make men stupid, but men don't make women stupid -- science says! I can see people extrapolating from this in all sorts of really ugly ways.

  • Apparently the Yankees won the World Series last night. Normally I pay at least marginal attention to these things, but I didn't notice until this morning.

  • NaNo! I'm still a bit behind on quota, but I got over a stumbling block last night that was slowing me down, so I'm relieved about that. I also realized that the one critical thing I hadn't done in my advance planning was really lay out when specific things happen in the time line. This is critical in this book, because the timeline is so condensed -- it starts on a Thursday at 6am in L.A. before we move to Chicago, and other than the denoument (which really, could be a lead in for a sequel set in L.A., god help me!) is done by 3pm the following Monday. Time is very precise in this shit.

    On the other hand, I have established 3 distinct voices for my girls. News that particularly excites me: Hope is no longer coming off like a ditz, and Jean is just totally amazing and a surprise to me. Ashley I nailed a couple of days ago, so I'm not even worried about that. Several minor characters have also been established, including the 22-year-old gay secretary in Jean's department, and a recurring "fat guy in a dragon suit" who may be my new favorite person in the whole thing; I want to hug him.

    Various backstory things have also been resolved, including the origin of Hope's email address (people, I just created a fictional B-movie called Con Vixen 77; god help us all). Also, I'm winding up with way more character diversity than I thought I would which is fantastic, but seeing as it's set at a con in 2010, I think I'm actually going to have to mention RaceFail in passing in the book.

    Yesterday, I registered email addresses for Ashley, Jean, Hope, Evan and Stacey, which means that I will soon switch all those to the right thing in the text and will be putting up an excerpt (some of which you've seen a rough version of) on the NaNo site.

    Additionally, my plan is to spend December editing and then send it to willing critical readers to look at while I'm away in the first half of January (so I'm not around to bug you). If you're willing to be a critical reader, let me know. I have a few people I already want to ask because they have skills in calling my shit on specific key issues (i.e., Jill, you're on comics duty; Sam or Sharon, if you'er willing you're on Chicago duty). Any fannish PoC who's willing to read for and call me on any RaceFail on my part (I already do have at least one reader who can address these things from personal experience, although our long-standing writing partnership means she's more likely to yell at me about my sentence length, hence the desire for more eyes on this issue) in this thing would be particularly desperately appreciated, since two of the three main women are PoC, and I would prefer to refrain from showing my ass and making people unhappy. I realize, of course, this is the Department of Not Your Job and my asking is potentially intrusive and privileged.

    I'm probably going to try to keep my initial reader list down to about ten, but if you're interested in a hardcore way (as opposed to "gimme book now!" -- which you know I love too), please let me know.

    I can't believe I'm getting this done. I can't believe this is happening.

  • Building with whole trees.

  • I'm trying, very hard, not to be politically angry today, as I found it unenjoyable yesterday, both because I literally felt my own blood pressure go up, and because the whole sorry affair involved lots of assumptions that were sort of irrelevant and unhappy-making, so I'm going to cover a few of them below and then let it go, although I'll probably have some more generalized thoughts on queerness in America right now sometime vaguely soonish.

    1. Actually, I support the right to bear arms pretty strongly. I've been hunting more than once in the past, and I'm going to a shooting range with some folks in L.A., and I'm looking forward to it because I haven't been in ages. I've probably forgotten almost everything I know. I am also pro-choice, and, although I don't talk about it much, aggressively anti death penalty. The assumption that one political belief or fact about my life means that the rest of my views can be easily and obviously predicted isn't accurate or fair.

    2. I give a great deal of money relative to my income to a number of organizations each year. These include Lambda Legal Defense, various political campaigns, and specific Donors Choose programs. Some of my Holiday gifts this year will probably be from Heifer International, and I am also planning on donating to Clitoraid and a few others. I go to protests and work for causes I believe in when I can, which is less than I would like. The idea that I am just whining in my journal and not doing anything about the issues I care about, when I give money and time in addition to speaking on these topics on panels and such when I have the opportunity to do so is ludicrous. Also, this journal is a platform. Maybe not a very big one, but I know it sometimes mobilizes people to take action when they might not have otherwise. So hey!

    3. I'm not sure how to even address the whole "you're lazy/poor/use your disease as an excuse" thing when it's also put up next to "you're a horrible elitist" thing that also goes on around here. Look, I had a fantastic education, in large part through luck, and got out of college without debt mostly through hard work and a good scholarship. I'm privileged not to have certain financial burdens and to have parents that took risks to make my life different from theirs. I'm old-fashioned and arguably conservative in my feelings about tradition, language and even clothing in ways that I am coming to recognize can sometimes feel fail-y to other people. I am trying to stand by who and what I am, which is something very complicated and something I'm very proud of, while also trying to fail better. I resent a society that measures my worth by how much money I make or what professional success I have, and despite how much I brag here, I largely don't talk about the fact that I work hard and make money in a way that really should preclude some stripes of Republicans from saying I don't count because I'm not self-reliant. If this paragraph is intensely confusing, that's because sometimes I'm intensely confused by people's assumptions about me.

  • Yuletide sign-ups are open; I need to get on that.

  • In less than two months, Patty and I leave for our cruise.

  • Which reminds me (since Patty asked for cruise book recs yesterday), does anyone have any YA fic recommendations in Spanish? I'm doing a lot of Spanish-language reading for my job lately, and I'd like to continue to develop that skill. Without a dictionary, I think my reading level is probably at about the 8th-grade level, but that's not really easy yet. So I think that's sort of the level of thing I am looking for.
  • Page 2 of 2 << [1] [2] >>

    Date: 2009-11-05 08:59 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] seaopaque.livejournal.com
    Hey Racheline, I'm into being a critical reader. I'd be looking at your ms from a general interest standpoint, so you'd get the lay/outsider read from me. If you want a pair of eyes like that, lemme know.

    Date: 2009-11-05 09:01 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com
    I very well might, if not on the first pass in January, than certainly on the second, because you're right, this has to be accessible to folks that aren't of the book's world.

    Thank you!

    Date: 2009-11-05 09:03 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] seaopaque.livejournal.com
    You're welcome. NaNo just makes me so damned happy.

    Date: 2009-11-05 10:19 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] st-aelphaba.livejournal.com
    Here in Ohio, of course, the serial killer story is getting pretty heavy coverage, but the entire thing is so ghastly and just gross that there's no sensationalizing it. I'm not all that shocked to hear the national networks aren't interested in a story this ugly.

    I think the fact that this monster was allowed to go on so long is most certainly tied to race and poverty and antipathy in general. "Oh, it's just the sausage factory." The only reason he was caught at all is because he grew old and sloppy and let one get away, not due to any sharp work on the part of the authorities.

    Date: 2009-11-05 10:25 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] roadnotes.livejournal.com
    If you don't find a better PoC critical reader -- and you should have dozens on your list -- talk to me.

    I apologize for the off-topic-ness...

    Date: 2009-11-06 01:45 am (UTC)
    ext_20628: From Best Movie Ever, Hard Core Logo (Gretel Wienerschnitzel!)
    From: [identity profile] junebugged.livejournal.com
    But I have a sneaking suspicion that my wheat allergy is actually Celiac. I remember a great post of yours that went really in-depth with the resources you use... my biggest fear is the inevitable rise in my grocery bill. I am pretty much maxed in my budget as it is, but it doesn't matter - health should trump all.

    Rambling aside - I have a million links about it but nothing beats gaining knowledge from someone who is living through it.

    Any direction you can provide at this point would mean the world to me - I'm just so sick of having possible celiac symptoms on top of all of the lingering stroke symptoms and basically feeling like I can never get out of bed anymore.

    Thank you, I'm sorry, thank you

    Re: I apologize for the off-topic-ness...

    Date: 2009-11-06 01:51 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com
    First, no worries.
    Second, I have no idea where that post is.
    Third, I think this is a good thing for you to try, because there's so much neurological impact from gluten for people with celiac disease.

    Very briefly:
    - Trader Joe's (cheap!) -- if you go to the manager's station and ask for their gluten-free food list, they have one, updated every week or so. Makes shopping their easier.
    - Whole Foods -- expensive, but their gluten-free sandwich bread is the only one I like. See also good selection of gluten-free pizza, cookies and convenience foods. They also have a line of "everyday value" gluten-free mixes that are good and cheap.
    - If you don't know about http://angelfoodministries.org/ you should, as they have a gluten-free box that could help with your budget concerns.
    - Brands of gluten-free products that I generally like (although every brand has some duds): Glutino, Kinnikinnik, Scharrs.
    - Here in the city, cheap restaurants with gluten-free menus include Risotteria (this place is AMAZING and always has a line) and LIlli and Loos (gluten-free Asian food is really hard to find because of the wheat in most soy sauce). Babycakes is a gluten-free bakery on the Lower East Side. I find their cupcakes too dense, but their other stuff is AMAZING.
    - When available to you, chain restaurants can be your friends as they often have gluten free menus (see Outback Steakhouse, P.F. Changs, Legal Seafood).
    - Betty Crocker now makes gluten-free cake and cookie and brownie mixes. I've seen them in some supermarkets on the Upper East Side, they are really good.
    - Chex has recently made their Rice Chex flavors gluten-free (they weren't previously due to malt flavoring, which is a problem for many cereals). Good stuff.
    - Gluten-free beers I like are New Grist and Redbridge.

    Date: 2009-11-06 02:18 pm (UTC)
    ext_20628: From Best Movie Ever, Hard Core Logo (Default)
    From: [identity profile] junebugged.livejournal.com
    Amazing. Thank you so, so much for this.

    Date: 2009-11-06 02:37 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com
    Also Mozarelli's on 23rd and Madison -- gluten-free pizza (I don't like there's much) and a HUGE selection of gluten-free cookies, including traditional Italian varieties.

    Date: 2009-11-06 03:44 am (UTC)
    rosefox: Green books on library shelves. (Default)
    From: [personal profile] rosefox
    There's some concern over [livejournal.com profile] nellorat being involved with that ICFA scholarship thing.

    Date: 2009-11-06 07:15 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] nellorat.livejournal.com
    rm, thanks for boosting the signal. So far e-mail is smallish but wonderful, wonderful people, the best of both worlds.

    I hope people check out my responses to those concerns: one (possibly implying that the ICFA isn't doing any outreach to PoC) I take seriously; the rest come from what seem to be some false assumptions. But clearly if people don't want the offer because of me or [livejournal.com profile] womzilla, that's their choice.

    Date: 2009-11-06 04:56 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] featherofeeling.livejournal.com
    I often find out about things through your journal, and sometimes act on them! I don't understand why some people forget that words - discussion and startling new knowledge and stories - can also impact the "real" world.

    Speaking of this and of media coverage, may I just say that I am deeply fearful about the way the Fort Hood shooting is going to play out...

    Date: 2009-11-06 12:26 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] lunasblues.livejournal.com
    I have enjoyed the Harry Potter books en espanol.

    Date: 2009-11-06 05:22 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] bodlon.livejournal.com
    - Hamthrax! I am adding this to my lexicon immediately, right next to "pig flu," "porkulosis," and "bacon fever." Considering that yesterday J. and I were both sick and declared it "dog flu," this is disturbingly timely.

    - Re: the stalking, this (i.e. deeply scary behavior can arise from other, less scary patterns of behavior) feels really obvious to me. What worries me is the bad conclusions people are likely to draw from that.

    - I'm a bit baffled by the women-only residences from a legal perspective.

    - Re: Waters of Mars, I might know a guy. Ping me.

    - I'm caught up on Girl Number 9, and agreeing wholeheartedly about the L&O + Saw verdict. The things I'm liking about it are fewer than the things that leave me turned off or unmoved. I'll watch the ender tonight because I'm curious to see where it goes, but I think this feels like a missed opportunity.

    - I'm not surprised about the shift with V, and think I'm interested, but I agree that something feels lost because the themes are different. Some of it has been pretty damn predictable, and I think they laid it on a bit thick when that crucifix went tumbling to the ground, but they're really nailing a lot of it emotionally. The thing bothering me is with the kids, they seem to have skipped the logical leap from "Yay, Visitors!" to "Political tagging!" I realize that's a striking image, and from the original, but I expect my shout-outs to fit their new environs a bit better.

    Also, yay Tudyk!

    - Eff yes, book. I am unsure of how available I am to be useful, but if that's okay, I'm yours.

    Date: 2009-11-06 05:23 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com
    Well, like I said, it would be early January (I want to give it to readers while I'm on a cruise and can't angst about it or badger anyone).

    V makes me realize that one of my big complaints about things being shifted (it's not just V) from WWII allegory to 9/11-related concerns is it creates an equation between terrorism and the actions of the Nazis, and that's just false, even if, at base, there is a desire to extermination and economic impetus that set shit in motion in both cases.
    Edited Date: 2009-11-06 05:24 pm (UTC)

    Date: 2009-11-06 05:35 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] bodlon.livejournal.com
    There's a faulty school of thought -- and you hit on it with the guns/death penalty thing elsewhere -- in which people assume that things which can be compared must be identical. Makes for a lot of bad analogies on all fronts.

    I don't think we've got quite enough of the new V to see entirely where they're trending in this regard, but I'll be surprised if they strip out all the Nazi allegory.

    Though, you know, we've got something interesting in the Resistance, as I'm not quite sure how they'll frame that. Our contemporary near-relative to that is the militia movement, which...man. I don't know.

    Date: 2009-11-06 07:42 pm (UTC)
    ext_6373: A swan and a ballerina from an old children's book about ballet, captioned SWAN! (WARNING cognitive hazard by fritter)
    From: [identity profile] annlarimer.livejournal.com
    Could you become a celebrity stalker?

    I'm really kinda busy...

    Date: 2009-11-07 12:05 am (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] ladyofthelog.livejournal.com
    I totally want to be a critical reader! (I should also add: because I live in Chicago, have done a fair amount of first-reader-ing ([livejournal.com profile] premeditation & [livejournal.com profile] a_hollow_sky), and also, consume chick lit voraciously (or was at least doing so before BUFFY FANFICTION ate my soul life)).
    Edited Date: 2009-11-07 12:08 am (UTC)
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