erinptah: Nimona icon by piplupcommander (nimona)
2025-03-09 09:56 pm

A bunch of fun links about literature, art, and comics

"Can you guess if the word is an antidepressants drug or a Tolkien character?" (A couple of them are gimmes, but some are genuinely tough!)

Working out which Houses correspond to which planets in the Locked Tomb series.

Visual references that absolutely helped me track the action while reading the first two books: Necromancers and cavaliers from Gideon the Ninth, and a whole massive character-design lineup from Harrow the Ninth.

2020 interview with Tamsyn Muir: "I know lots of people don’t wish for their work to be used by fanfiction writers. I think that should be respected. I mean, I think their reasons are wrongheaded and that they totally misunderstand what is going on, but the fanfiction community is generally generous with people who say they don’t want stuff written about their property. I hope my fandom is writing long serious epics, and writing parody pieces that make me look stupid, and weird porn, and ships I never saw coming."

Long list of punny restaurant names, suggested by one of the writers for The Good Place.

"this video game i've been playing since i was a kid called Wizard101 updated and added a new world where the villain essentially pretends to be Khonshu, and they added a character called Loon Knight."

Loon Knight


Somebody wrote to Dear Prudence, confessing to (in short) sending anon hate to the antis who attacked them for writing darkfic. Prudie's perfectly on-point response boils down to "you have to stop bullying these people, instead you should channel your spite into writing more darkfic."

"Through the use of comic book conventions, readers are guided through the decipherment of logographic writing from Central Mexico and, in the process, are shown how colonization has limited our contemporary understanding of ancient Indigenous people."

"I’ve wanted to try my had at drawing [Wally Wood's 22 panels that always work] all myself over the years, and decided to finally give it a crack with a twist: could I also tell a STORY using those exact panel layouts?"

"But why is the DeviantART stamp? Who was the originator of the DeviantART stamp, how did they become so popular? This question was posed on a forum I frequent, and I was unable to find any existing write-ups, so I sought to answer it myself."
erinptah: Cat in a backpack (happy)
2024-10-23 03:20 pm

OC meme for writers, nabbed from Bluesky

Share your OC boundaries:

Is fanart ok: Yes! Tag me to get reshared
Is shipping ok: Yes, encouraged
Is kinning ok: In your own head, sure, but don’t tell me about it
Is fanfiction/writing ok: Yes
Can others draw their OC’s with yours: Yes
Is NSFW stuff ok: Yes, but only tag me if you’re sure I’d be into it

(I’m ErinPtah on Bluesky now, if you want to give me a follow! So far I’m mostly crossposting from Mastodon, but there’s new and different content to reblog.)

erinptah: nebula (space)
2024-09-30 11:53 pm

30 Days of Leif & Thorn: the social-media cage match

Trying something new:

On Tumblr, I’m queuing a set of 30 past Leif & Thorn strips, with a bit of director’s commentary for each. No particular order, and I’m not trying to find my Favorite Strips of All Time, just “hey, I have something to say about this one.”

And then I’m crossposting them on Facebook, Instagram, Xitter, Mastodon, and Bluesky. (That’s right, I’m seizing the moment to experiment with Bluesky. If you’re there too, give me a follow.)

Which site gets the best response? Which posts get the most traction? Which platform(s) will I keep posting on after this project is complete? TBD!

(I’m not crossposting on Dreamwidth, or WordPress, because neither of those is a great “get your work in front of people who don’t already follow you” platform. Will stick to using those for, you know, regular old-fashioned blogging.)

erinptah: Vintage screensaver (computing)
2024-03-02 12:24 am

Conclusion: Empowered Ownership Over Your Content

I posted a long explanation of how Automattic's shenanigans (don't) affect your self-hosted Wordpress sites on the Leif & Thorn site.

And, in light of my previous post, a much shorter conclusion over on my "actually hosted by Automattic" blog.

Meanwhile, I made a new side account over on DA where all the posts are marked "authorized for inclusion in third-party AI datasets."

(I do flag them as AI-generated, though, so if your browsing settings include "don't show me AI works" I'm not shoving them in your face. That would just be rude.)

On the scale of "dumb" to "so dumb it's inspired", I genuinely don't know where this falls? Gonna just roll with it for a while, see what happens.
erinptah: Cat in christmas lights (christmas)
2023-12-20 12:29 pm

End-of-year link cleanout: literature, writers, comics

Wrote up recs for a couple webcomic collections, and got them into this 13 Best Books With Gay Protagonists list! (Pretty sure it’s not “13 best” so much as “the only 13 recs we got,” but still. A little good publicity never hurts.)

“The numbers just look worse with every new change, and Diamond didn’t change the things that I think most [local comic shops] actually are concerned about the most (like shipping costs) ” From 2022, but the nerdy business details are enlightening.

Critics came up with a narrative that I was promoting shoplifting. Which as you might know is crimes, and thus should be mocked and ridiculed. But something was different this time…”

“…books by marginalized authors are more often tagged with triggering content than books by white authors on The StoryGraph (where readers can tag books with triggering content). […] Another issue surrounding trigger warnings and marginalized authors is how often these get tagged for content that does not exist on the book.” When readers have unlimited power to tag works, that power gets weaponized against the most vulnerable.

Ranking of the top 50 most-trafficked Arts & Entertainment websites in the world. A couple years ago, AO3 was (topped only by Youtube, Netflix, Wikia, Spotify, IMDB, and the Chinese entertainment site Bilibili). Now it’s down to (bumped by HBO, MiguVideo, Aniwave, DisneyPlus, and Pixiv). Can’t begrudge Pixiv the traffic, and AO3 is still in terms of Sites To Read Fiction On. (Wattpad is a ways below, fanfiction.net no longer shows up in the top 50.)

Nona lives in a genre where the back blurb is, ‘How do you deal with the world’s most embarrassing family — AND school?! How do you cope when the biggest jerk in the universe … turns out to be your secret crush’s out-of-town cousin?!?!’ Everyone else in the book is living in a docudrama where you get a message at the beginning saying, ‘Caution: Disturbing scenes will follow.'” Fun Tamsyn Muir interview from before the NtN release.

“I spent five years trying to get this stupid job and now that I have it I’m not going to hire it out to somebody else. The whole pleasure for me is having the opportunity to do a comic strip for a living, and now that I’ve finally got that I’m not going to give it away.” Not sure Bill Watterson has done new interviews for decades, but this is an old one, and a fun read.

erinptah: Rainbow stained glass (rainbow)
2023-12-16 02:56 am

AO3 vs ComicFury on generative-AI policies

From the AO3, May 2023:At the moment, there is nothing in our Terms of Service that prohibits fanworks that are fully or partly generated with AI tools from being posted to the AO3, if they otherwise qualify as fanworks. […] Depending on the circumstances, AI-generated works could violate our anti-spam policies (e.g. if a creator posts a significant number in a short time).”

As I said at the time — this is a reasonable call, and I support it.

From ComicFury, November 2023:I will cut right to the chase, we have decided not to allow AI-art based webcomics on the site. […] It’s obviously not possible to perfectly police AI art if the author lies about it and isn’t super obvious about that, especially more subtle uses, so the rule is to some extent based on the honor system, which we think is probably better than making everyone pee in a cup all the time.”

Also a reasonable call, and I support it!

Thought this was a useful mini-case study in “what specific details lead to different generative-AI policies making sense for different platforms?”

The ones at play here:

1) Can bad-faith users exploit your site to profit off of bot-generated content?

AO3 is an explicitly non-commercial site. They already had “we will host creative remixing of material the poster does not own the copyright to” in their founding principles — and one of the legal pillars upholding that is “we are not a sales platform, users are not allowed to make money off of this.”

ComicFury has never done that — and you wouldn’t want them to. It allows users to run advertising, link their Patreons and crowdfunding campaigns, sell books/merchandise, all the tricks us webcomic creators use to get by.

The core motive for “bot-generate a bunch of low-quality slop you don’t care about” is to run ads next to it. ComicFury is a juicy target for that kind of spam. AO3, which doesn’t let you run ads on any kind of content, is not.

(This is not a moral judgment that all bot users are bad-faith users. I have a genuinely fun time getting the Bing artbot’s interpretation of prompts like “4 panel comic Erin Ptah art style”. But the bad ones exist, and your site policies have to account for that.)

AI-generated comic

2) How much will it cost you to host the bot-generated content?

ComicFury primarily hosts…comics. To make it a useful platform for that, every user can upload lots of image files, with very large sizes. An influx of bot-generated images could easily overwhelm their server space and bandwidth abilities.

(Don’t know this for sure, but I get the impression this was starting to be a concern already, and that’s one of the reasons for the policy announcement.)

AO3 primarily hosts text. (There are a few limited cases in which they host art, but there’s not a general-use “upload your image files here” option.) Text is small and cheap! An influx of bot-generated text is not at risk of overwhelming the servers. Users who tried wouldn’t even get close before getting slapped down under the “don’t spam” policy.

...and, listen, you can go back and forth all day on philosophical questions like “does the bot-generated stuff have Inherent Artistic Value?” But when platforms are setting policies, it’s okay to let those be guided by practical questions, with findable answers.

(One more generated piece to see us out: the same artbot’s interpretation of “4 panel fantasy comedy romance comic Leif & Thorn style”. Yes, it came up with 5 panels. Hozry 1 slor indeed.)

Bot generated comic

 
erinptah: (Default)
2023-10-26 07:05 pm

Thorniverse, meet Fediverse

I followed the instructions on this post to Fediverse-enable my longtime WordPress blog. Unlike with the ActivityPub integration on the BICP site, this has no customizable settings at all, so I have no idea how this is going to look. But it’ll be out there!

Here’s the incredibly-clunky username to search for from your own Fediverse account: erinptah.wordpress.com@erinptah.wordpress.com

~*~

Welsh photographer runs a shot of a waterfall through Google’s “Magic Editor”, shows us the side-by-side. Well worth checking out.

It’s absolutely fascinating, taking a close look at which changes the “AI” makes. It puts a decent Rock Texture on the rocks, but, does it not have data on Moss Textures? Or has it been trained to detect and erase moss as not “aesthetic”?

Similar with the trees — it replaces them with something you’d describe as “trees” in its data set, but not the species from the original. Zooming in on the real forest reveals a whole variety of branches and leaves, even. The bot’s forest all looks the same.

…The big ferns in the foreground just got turned into rocks. And, at the lowest level of waterfall, half of the water is now a grey rock too.

If someone’s goal was to make generic Pretty Nature Images that would look nice as a wallpaper, this is great! If their goal was anything like “sharing the beauty of a specific location” or “capturing a special experience to remember it later” or “getting a reference you can use to realistically draw this kind of tree,” it’s amazingly useless.

(The other day I had my first encounter with one of those in the wild. Was looking for information on what happens to rose bushes when you over-water them! Got a long-winded SEO-bait article that was interspersed with MidJourney-esque rose paintings. Even as art pieces, they were pretty muddy and underwhelming. As visuals to help you evaluate whether your IRL roses show signs of over-watering, they’re garbage.)

-*-

Leif & Thorn hit its 8th anniversary yesterday!

And just this afternoon, the campaign to print Volume 6 smashed through its goal.

Speaking of the Fediverse, the BackerKit campaign data says I got over 800 visits through Mastodon back on the 16th. No extra backers out of it (those are mostly coming from my website, my mailing list, and BK’s own promos), but most days I don’t get that many visits from every source put together. And there’s no way my own posts on Mastodon are getting that many views.

Some kind of glitch? A shoutout from somebody else in the Fediverse? A fan copying the Mastodon referral link onto a whole other platform?

It’s very possible this is just…not find-out-able. But I wish I knew!

erinptah: Cat in a backpack (happy)
2023-10-12 12:28 pm

Tumblr redirect + Leif & Thorn live

1) Redid the BICP-in-name-only Tumblr, now it’s my general-purpose Art Tumblr for real.

Lifesaving code to redirect all the old URLs! Unlike more user-friendly sites Dreamwidth and Deviantart, Tumblr doesn’t have an option to do this automatically. But customizable layouts mean you can put in the JavaScript on your own…assuming you can even find that post that explains how.

Leif & Thorn Volume 6 cover mockup

2) The campaign for Leif & Thorn Volume 6 is live!

I planned to launch this on the usual Sunday night…instead, I helped the BackerKit support team discover a bug. So we finally went live on late Wednesday. Even with that bumpy start, we’re over 50% funded on Day 1 – and we’re the #8 trending project on all of BackerKit.

Check it out! Grab a copy! Tell your friends!

Screencap of the project trending at #8
erinptah: Human Luna (sailor moon)
2023-08-20 06:49 pm

Getting-to-know-you questions meme from findingfriends

The intro meme at [community profile] findingfriends  looked fun and substantive, so here goes!

Is there an interesting story behind your username?

I was 10 or 11, I was coming up with Sailor Moon OCs, I flipped to the “list of mythology topics” page in what must’ve been the family World Book Encyclopedia, and picked half a dozen names basically at random. One of them ended up being Sailor Ptah.

…you want to see some art, right? Of course you do.

Middle-school art of Sailor PtahClassic!

(This was drawn on the back of…some kind of school worksheet, I think? I wasn’t getting sketchbooks yet. You can see the backwards text through the scan.)

So I was “SailorPtah” everywhere for a lot of years. Eventually swapped the “sailor” part for my first name, and now I’m “ErinPtah” everywhere.

 

 

Further questions + photo of cats behind the cut )
erinptah: nebula (space)
2023-08-09 07:43 pm

The More Things Change, webcomicversary edition

Recently had my “20 years of making webcomics” anniversary. These strips were posted about 2 decades apart!

And Shine Heaven Now, June 9, 2003:

First strip of And Shine Heaven Now, building up to a third panel where a character from another dimension crashes ominously into frame

Leif & Thorn, July 30, 2023:

First strip of the current Leif & Thorn storyline, building up to a third panel where a character from another dimension crashes ominously into frame

The art style has gone through a ton of development…but sometimes a good opening is a good opening, you know?

erinptah: (pyramid)
2023-06-10 11:37 pm

Roundup of webcomic news (good, gay) and AI news (heavy sigh)

A tournament to find the most obscure/unknown webcomic is running on Tumblr! An incredible place to trawl for putting new comics on To Read list.

1 like = 1 rec for a webcomic with major LGBTQ characters” on Mastodon is falling behind the Tumblr version. Go give it some shares, so I can put all the recs on both sites?

Finally did a big update to the Help, I Want To Start My Own Webcomic Site, How Do I Start guide. Now it has a bunch of references to Toocheke — which I haven’t actually used, so anyone who has, do please comment and tell us about it!

I’ve been invited to the closed beta of Crowdfunding by BackerKit! Not much on my creator profile yet, but more about Leif & Thorn Volume 6 will be there…soonish.

I’ve also been presented with a “fill your site with low-quality SEO-spam glurge articles faster by using an LLM” limited-trial feature. Now I just have to figure out the 20 funniest possible things to use it on.

…and, speaking of LLMs:

Me, queueing a Leif & Thorn where Coco yells at officials for replacing all their human staff with non-field-tested “AI” when lives are at stake, to post on May 8: “This is surely an exaggerated fantasy situation I am inventing as a cautionary tale, and not something that will literally go down IRL in the next 3 weeks.”

The next 3 weeks:

Yyyyyeah.

Did not want that to become a fulfilled prediction! Really hope this doesn’t become a trend. (Both the “putting people’s lives in the hands of chatbots” part, and the “hyperbolic comedy skeeviness coming true” part.)

erinptah: (lighthouse)
2023-06-04 12:36 am
Entry tags:

Pride Month recs are back!

It’s June again, and you know what that means: time for all the gay webcomics to spend the month hyping each other up.

(...also, a new opportunity to lightly nudge people toward Mastodon. Getting a little traction so far, let's see if it has legs.)

Here’s my contribution:

1 like on this Mastodon post = 1 rec for a webcomic with major LGBTQ characters!

1 like on this Tumblr post = also 1 rec for a webcomic with major LGBTQ characters!

To keep life simple, I’m giving the same recs, in the same order, on both sites. So far they’re keeping pace with each other — but maybe one will pull ahead? Reblog/share/boost/etc your favorite to keep the links flowing.

erinptah: Vintage screensaver (computing)
2021-07-31 07:52 pm

Aaaaand spoke too soon

Made a post last night about how I think the computer is okay, came home from work this afternoon to find it did this again. I know, I know, I jinxed it.

Dell Diagnostics hardware scan

No issues found! You didn’t find any issues the last four times, either! Why do you keep doing this.

Gaaaah. Should I even try to do a full reinstall? Contact Dell customer service and sit through however many hours of troubleshooting they’d want to do? Or just give up and live like this?


…and, in a completely unrelated bonus vent:

Chris Chan, long-time Webcomic Person and generally infamous Internet Personality, has been trending on Twitter for a bit. For entirely horrible reasons. If you don’t want to read about elder abuse and mental illness, don’t go digging.

But given that she has like a 20-year history of being egged/goaded/manipulated by trolls into doing awful things for their entertainment…my first thought on hearing bad news about her is “wonder which sociopath talked her into thinking this was ok.”

(For anyone who wants receipts, there’s a comprehensive documentary series on YouTube that goes through the trolling in detail. And by “comprehensive” I mean “59 parts so far, each about 40 minutes long, and it’s only caught up through 2017.” The creator just put it on hiatus, because they don’t want to seem like they’re taking advantage of a terrible situation for hits — which is a principled move, good for them — but here I am linking to the back catalog anyway.)

Seriously, in a better healthcare system Chris would’ve been taken into some kind of professional care at least a decade ago, for her own safety. Let alone anyone else’s.

And I hate how sure I am that the instigators are never gonna see any consequences ever.

erinptah: Cat in a backpack (cat)
2021-07-16 01:01 pm

Family vac[cin]ations, the cat vs. the Horrible Strangers, reactions to Black Widow, Loki, Check Ple

Stuff about stuff that’s been up.

Family vac[cin]ations

My parents and brother came to town, making it the first time we’ve all been in one place for almost 2 years. (Parents have been vaccinated for a while, and they visited earlier in 2021. Brother is (a) young, (b) low-risk, and (c) not in a customer-facing position, so he only skated over the “2 weeks since second dose” theshhold just in time to get here.)

We visited a bunch of the local relatives. On one side, the grandparents who flatly refused to entertain unvaccinated visitors (so everyone’s had their shots). On the other, the grandparents who got their own shots as soon as possible, but were having unmasked indoor visits with my virulently antivaxxer aunt and her kids right up until they — the grandparents — tested positive.

Grandfather, who’d only had his first shot, got pretty sick and was hospitalized, but pulled through. Grandmother, who’d had both shots, barely got the sniffles, wouldn’t even have thought of getting tested if she didn’t live in the same house as a seriously-ill person. Aunt has only doubled down on how these fraudulent vaccines don’t even do anything, you guys.

I, uh, timed my part of the visit to not encounter the antivaxxer aunt.

Banging and drilling

A few relatives came over to my apartment to do some handiwork projects. Which meant the Fluff had his space invaded by Horrible Strangers, who talked and hammered and drilled and vacuumed and generally made Horrible Noises.

This cat was not a happy camper.

Normally he hides under the daybed, crouched on top of the boxes I keep under there. This time, he managed to shove one of the boxes away from the wall, so he could squeeze himself in behind it. Note, these are the boxes with the Leif & Thorn books in them — they’re heavy.

It took a solid 2 hours after the Horrible Strangers left before the fluff poked his nose out of his hiding spot. And then he went back under. It was a few more hours, and a few more exploratory peeks, before he was walking around the place like normal again.

Poor guy. He’s had such a nice year, and now this.

Black Widow (no specific spoilers)

Family had a bunch of Potential Outings planned, but the only one we actually did was seeing Black Widow on the big screen.

The building had small groups of other patrons; our theater was flat-out empty except for us. (So if you tentatively want to catch a movie but are worried about large groups in enclosed spaces…give it a shot.)

The movie was good! Mostly takes place during the period when Natasha was on the run after Civil War, gives her a solo adventure that fleshes out her backstory — both parts we knew about, and parts that are new. Funny, heartwarming when it wanted to be, makes good use of that Disney “sure, blow up all the cars you want” money.

I’m usually more into the magic and sci-fi sides of the MCU, and this was a Cap-style action-spy-thriller, no super-science beyond what you can use for “excuses to do cooler stunts.” So it wasn’t an instant favorite the way Captain Marvel was.

But it was good at what it wanted to be. It wasn’t a perfunctory “I want to support the general idea of more female superheroes getting their own solo movies” thing. It was fun, and I liked it. Marvel did good.

Speaking of Marvel:

Loki (also no specific spoilers)

The whole 6-episode series is out now, and I…

…didn’t…like it?

Which is wild, because it has all the ingredients for a thing I should like. Magic! Sci-fi! Time travel nonsense! Alternate versions of the same character having to deal with each other! Significant chunks of action on alien planets! Major queer and/or female characters! Shapeshifters! Quippy banter! Sassy, petty villain getting dragged kicking and screaming into a redemption arc!

The first episode sure felt like it was going to deliver on all those things in a way I enjoyed. And then every subsequent cliffhanger was like “okay…there were a couple specific scenes that are fun, but…is this going anywhere? This big moment should’ve been good, but why didn’t it have buildup? That dramatic setup we did get, why hasn’t it had any payoff? This weird bit, I can think of some in-universe reasons why it was weird, so is it setting up one of those, or is it just sloppy writing?”

And the answer was always “it’s just sloppy writing.”

…to be fair, I think sometimes the answer was COVID. There were scenes where you could see “none of the actors except the 2 leads are getting within 6 feet of each other, and it’s really restricting what the narrative can do.”

But that doesn’t explain all of it.

Feels like it should’ve been a full-length season. Make it a procedural, have Loki and company facing a Time Shenanigans case-of-the-week, and have the characters/relationships develop slowly over each case. Then at the end we get a multi-episode arc where the plot is all interconnected, the developments all come to a head, the status quo gets flipped over.

Instead we got pieces of that arc without any connective tissue. You get prickly suspicious characters skipping from “tense, mistrustful opponents” to “tentative admissions of Friendship” when they’ve only known each other for, what, a few days? With no tangible reason for their feelings to change. It’s just “this is the part of the story where that happens, so it’s happened.”

Ugh. It could’ve been so good! And it just…wasn’t.

…and speaking of “things I just finished that didn’t have connective tissue”:

Check, Please!

The famous, award-winning, funding-record-making, m/m webcomic? That I didn’t read during the whole length of its run. Finally picked up the print volumes when I saw them at the library, and that’s how I got through the whole thing.

It was really thin. Cute and fluffy and disjointed. Kept setting up potential conflicts, but then skimming right over them.

I flipped back through some fail_fandomanon threads from when the updates were being released live, and it was a recurring theme for new readers to go “wait, was this just…resolved offscreen? Or did I accidentally skip a page?” (I was reading a physical book and would occasionally wonder if it skipped a page. It never did.)

…unsurprisingly, the author was in Hockey RPF fandom, and a lot of fans were bringing their interests from Hockey RPF fandom. So you would have character show up in the background, and readers would be like “aha, I can tell this is an expy of Real Player X, I enjoy him because I’m transferring my fannish feelings about Real Player X onto him.” Then they’d still be invested even if he only appeared 2-3 times and never did anything significant in-universe.

Reading it over the course of a couple afternoons — and with zero personal background in who these IRL hockey players are — was a breezy experience.

But, wow, I totally get why it was so intense and frustrating for so many people reading it in realtime. It would’ve been a constant cycle of “sets you up for something interesting, keeps you on the hook for a week or a month or several months for the next update, dashes your hopes when the setup gets deflated or sidestepped or offscreen-resolved, but hey, now there’s setup for another something interesting, maybe if I just wait for the next update in a week or a month or–“

It did work well enough for enough readers to bring the author buckets of money, though. And she delivered a complete series by the end — everyone who backed a Kickstarter to get a book, got a book — which is more than you can say for a lot of webcomickers who’ve taken people’s money. As many faults as I could pick apart in the writing: you go rake in that cash, girl.

Okay, to end this on a brighter note:

Leverage: Redemption

Sequel to the original TV series. Not a reboot, a retcon, or a reimagining — just “it’s been a decade in-universe, let’s pick back up with these characters and see how they’re doing now.”

And, wow. It’s the rare follow-up that’s so well-done, and so worth it.

The first 8 episodes are streaming free (at least in the US). The cases-of-the-week have the same “yeah, we didn’t fix the system, but we gave a complicated and satisfying comeuppance to this one exploitative scumbag” vibe of Leverage Classic. There are bits that make it clear it’s set in the 2020s — a Big Pharma creep who took CARES Act money, a reference to a politician who sounds like an AOC expy, that kind of thing — but it’s not “chasing the trending headline” in a way that’ll make it feel dated and irrelevant too fast.

They killed off Nate (his actor has sexual-assault accusations, makes sense not to employ the guy), and the other characters miss him in a way that’s present without taking over the show. Brought Sophie/Parker/Eliot back together. I assume Hardison’s actor has a job with a better-paying show, because he guest-starred briefly to establish that he’s still around, then brought in his also-genius-hacker kid-sister replacement on the team.

They also picked up a not-quite-Nate-replacement — he’s a newbie but learning the ropes fast, and he can fill the role any time they need a clean-cut business-savvy white guy.

After Elliot’s actor did a stint on the crew in The Librarians, it’s delightful to me that Flynn’s actor is the new guy on the Leverage crew. Please let the creators find an excuse to cameo Eve, Exekiel, and Cassandra in the next half of the series. That would be crossover catnip.

erinptah: Cat in a backpack (cat)
2020-03-18 08:39 pm

Fun and thoughtful fandom links for your quarantine reading

Made my last outside-the-home trip for the foreseeable future, to Walgreens for meds and a couple other supplies. The shelves were out of thermometers...but on my way to the checkout I passed a couple of clerks discovering 4 of them from a box they just unearthed in the back. So I finally landed one.

(Didn't feel feverish, but it was nice to have the numbers to back it up. Also, clocked in at a slightly lower temperature than what the Red Cross got last Tuesday, suggesting I was already ramping up to the obvious fever I had Wednesday. But, yeah, all good now.)

Day Job is closed until further notice. Fortunately, part of their emergency-closure protocol is that we all still get paid. Every employee in every job should have the right to that. And those of you staffing pharmacies and grocery stores deserve higher wages and hazard pay.




All links from weeks/months ago, with no current events whatsoever:

Jenny Nicholson really nails a lot of what I thought was weird about Frozen 2. (It's pretty enjoyable anyway, but still.) Plus a pitch for an alternate version that would be a lot of fun.

"Hence the Fansplaining Shipping Survey, which we launched on April 2, 2019, and discussed in Episode #97, “The Shipping Question.” It ran until April 16th and ultimately attracted 17,391 respondents. [...] You can read the questions, download the raw data under a CC BY 4.0 license, and explore the cleaned-up data through an interactive visualization. This is the first of several pieces we’ll write analyzing the results."

"The Language that Gets People to Give: Phrases that Predict Success on Kickstarter." (One of the lessons is, that title should say "buy", not "give". It's not a donation, it's a preorder!)

"The point of me recounting all of this is to try and illustrate how much of the current hostility over fan content probably stems from that loss of content control. The toxicity of the purity discourse has made it hard for some of us to look for the root cause."

"The survey asked for participants to indicate what [online social-media fandom] platforms they use/used from a given list, and also to indicate a date range (e.g., Tumblr 2006-2018). I parsed those date ranges in order to determine for a given platform how many of our participants were active in a given year. "

"This document is made with the intention of keeping track of the issues the community has with [SmackJeeves] as it stands, be it from what functions the site has (or lacks), to issues with loading the site. Anyone is free to add issues they're aware of that aren't listed already."

"Meet the genderqueer asexual who has cataloged over a thousand mostly-queer webcomics."

"I happened to go over and check, and reader, it must have been the Sale Charts Gods looking over me, because what did I find except Raina Telgemeier’s new book Guts at the very top of the chart. Not the graphic novel bestseller list, not the kids bestseller list. THE REGULAR OLD BOOK/BOOK BESTSELLER CHARTS, with 76,216 copies sold that week. Looks like that 1 million copy first printing was a good idea."

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