• White Purple Christmas

    A felt ornament of the musician Prince, dressed in a vibrant purple outfit.
  • Sea Salt

    Inspired by Austin Kleon and hungry to make something, I went to tape and magazines and a potato chip bag. (Apparently the chips didn’t relieve my hunger).

    Auto-generated description: A collage features a variety of elements including a Sea Salt label, a vintage-style figure jumping, palm trees, and people among vibrant flowers.
  • Rutter Christmas

    Lovely. As ever. (OK, a couple are overly bouncy. But I’ll gladly put up with them if I can hear “What Sweeter Music.")

    Auto-generated description: A colorful, artistic depiction of a rooster is featured on the cover of The John Rutter Christmas Album, alongside text highlighting the Cambridge Singers and the City of London Sinfonia.
  • What a Sweetheart

    Archie

    A 'smiling' tan Mini Golden Doodle dog
  • Foggy Park

    Tietze Park - 15 Dec 2024, 10 am, Dallas, Texas

  • Thomas Mitchell

    When my wife is out of town, I often watch old movies. Tonight it’s Only Angels Have Wings with Cary Grant and Jean Arthur (plus Sig Ruman, Rita Hayworth, and others). They’re excellent – as one would expect. But I want to praise Thomas Mitchell, who was great in several Capra films and this one too.🍿

    American character actor Thomas Mitchell
  • “How He Came to Life One Day”: Photographs of Snowmen

    From 1854 to 1950: Wonderfulness from The Public Domain Review

    Two children from the 1950s with the snowman they built.
  • Hello, Mr. Chip

  • Scathing

    Cory Doctorow:

    I don’t want people to kill insurance executives, and I don’t want insurance executives to kill people. But I am unsurprised that this happened. Indeed, I’m surprised that it took so long. It should not be controversial to note that if you run an institution that makes people furious, they will eventually become furious with you.

    Suffice to say, however, being furious is not justification for gunning someone down.

  • Two Kinds of New

    From my friend, Dan Wilson:

    We say, “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year” in one breath, and commonly refer to this time of year as the “Holiday Season”, as if it were all one singular event. There is an interesting irony in lumping the two celebrations together …

  • Song of Zechariah

    In the tender compassion of our God
        the dawn from on high will break upon us
    To shine on those who dwell in darkness and in the shadow of death,
        and to guide our feet into the way of peace.

  • More Features, Not Bugs

    One of the worldviews that seems to appeal to the folks who are so excited about ChatGPT is “long-termism,” which assumes that humankind as a whole has a destiny, and that our tools will help us to reach it somewhat faster. What that destiny is, nobody knows. But work and education are hindrances to it, and, to the extent that they are necessary, should be sped through as quickly as possible. Since no real account is usually given of the thing that we are speeding to – it will involve space travel, algorithms, asteroid mining, and spreadsheets, but there’s a great nothing at its center – this worldview functions like nihilism. To me, work and education – like rest, love, worship, culture, strange hobbies, village pantomimes, dumb mistakes, chants that children jump rope to, heartbreaking last-quarter fumblings of the ball, graffiti on ugly bridges, all of it – are things we do because it is our job to be people.

    Phil Christman, Plough, Dec 3 2024

  • As impersonal systems play increasing roles in information-gathering and decision-making, the personal element can be summed up as “human error.” … [T]hen of course the fields concerned with human nature—specifically, all the ways it is not predictable—are unseated, too…

    [I]t is simply better to be a human when a personal God is at the heart of the universe. Human lives are easier to defend. Human joys have cosmic significance. Human foibles are “a feature, not a bug.” Human creativity is more arresting. Human language can be savored. Human stories must be told.

    Abigail Woolley Cutter

subscribe via RSS