prisca: (icon promptly mod)
prisca ([personal profile] prisca) wrote in [community profile] icon_promptly2026-05-22 03:14 pm
Entry tags:

Friday, May 22 - Make a Wish

Hello everybody,

it's Friday and our first Make a Wish day. Today is your chance to ask for icon(s) you've dreamed about for quite a while already.

Prompting:
- You may leave up to three wishes!
- One wish per comment.
- Everything goes: fandoms, characters, real persons, stock photos
- Add some extra wishes like colors, frames, background, or text. Leave your name if you want to get it added to your icon.

Filling a wish:
- One to three icons per prompt.
- Follow the wishes.
- You may fill a wish that already has fills.


You don't have any wishes at the moment? Remember, you can fill/refill any prompt at any time. Check previous days or the prompt overview list.

Have fun, and don't forget to be nice. NEVER change a gifted icon, or pass it off as your own. Thank you!
All Things Horror: From Movies & TV to Books & Games ([syndicated profile] allthingshorror_feed) wrote2026-05-22 12:49 pm

In desperate search of book:

Posted by /u/Olivia_Evergreene

Hello!! To make a very long story short, I am in desperate search of a horror related book I grabbed a couple years ago.

What I can remember:
- I purchased it at an Alamo Drafthouse in Raleigh.
- The book was an encyclopedia (?) of horror movies.
- Each movie had a written work-up, lots of pictures, great information etc.
- The main thing - it had a massive glossary (?) of all the movies mentioned, in the back, A-Z.

^It wasn’t a short list either, probably hundreds of movies. It had so many oddballs I had never heard of before. I believe the formatting in the back included the year it released. Ex: Nosferatu (1922)

I’ve looked online everywhere and a lot of the books I’m seeing just don’t look right? They’re not jogging my memory, and as I can’t look inside to see the back I really don’t know if the book is right.

I’m absolutely desperate to find this thing. Hopefully someone here has an idea?

submitted by /u/Olivia_Evergreene
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Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories ([syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed) wrote2026-05-22 09:00 am

Midwest flamingos and 'hurricane toads': Wildlife's strange storm stories

Hurricanes can be a devastating force—leveling trees, erasing beaches and damaging homes. But what do they do to wildlife? The answer ranges from the good to the bad to the ugly. Hurricanes sometimes help native species, but other times, they introduce and spread invasive species. Sometimes, they cause animals to evolve to survive these storms more easily, and sometimes they lead to mass migration or extinction.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-22 09:01 am

The Republic of Memory (The Song of the Safina, volume 1) by El Mahmud Sayed



Two centuries of neglect and political oppression come to a head in a generation ship half way to its destination.

The Republic of Memory (The Song of the Safina, volume 1) by El Mahmud Sayed
mellowtigger: (cooperation)
mellowtigger ([personal profile] mellowtigger) wrote2026-05-22 07:55 am
Entry tags:

theme song: Hello, Goodbye

I wasn't really moved by most of the last week at The Late Show. I do, however, like when Stephen Colbert answered the same questionnaire that he asked of many guests over the years. I think it was supposed to be a 20-minute skit, but this fond farewell ended up being nearly an hour long.

Today's theme song is meaningful because it's a direct product of this Republican administration and these troubling times. This video clip is a twofer. The first song itself would have been a great ending for Stephen Colbert's 11 years at The Late Show. Then it continues on to something even more profound. It reminds me very much of the Minnesota response to fascist abuse. As one of the comments on this video says, "This kind of felt more like a moment in history than a television show."

It's a simple lesson: "Don't lose yourself. Remember who you are and what your strength can do."

All Things Horror: From Movies & TV to Books & Games ([syndicated profile] allthingshorror_feed) wrote2026-05-22 12:15 pm

I need help finding a movie

Posted by /u/FragmentsOf

I think I was 7 when I saw it. 2000s possibly 2010s there’s a scene where a ghost doctor accompanied by maybe two ghost nurses appears behind a character, cuts the top of his head open with a scalpel and takes out his brain (kind of twisting it out). The same doctor doing same action shows earlier in a flashback scene when a character is telling the story about him. This is all I remember.

submitted by /u/FragmentsOf
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anneapocalypse: A headshot of Urianger in the Waking Sands. (ffxiv urianger waking sands)
Anne ([personal profile] anneapocalypse) wrote2026-05-22 08:45 am

[FFXIV Fic] Gentle Dark, Chapter 14: That the Brightest Light Might Shine

Fandom: Final Fantasy XIV
Rating: Mature
Archive Warnings: Major Character Death
Relationships: Urianger Augurelt/Moenbryda Wilfsunnwyn, Urianger Augurelt & Moenbryda Wilfsunnwyn, Ardbert & Urianger Augurelt, Unrealized Ardbert/Urianger Augurelt, Pre-Urianger Augurelt/Warrior of Light
Characters: Urianger Augurelt, Moenbryda Wilfsunnwyn, Ardbert Hylfyst, Elidibus, Unukalhai, Tataru Taru, Minfilia Warde, Warrior of Light, Dewlala Dewla, Y'shtola Rhul, Yugiri Mistwalker, Thancred Waters, J'Rhoomale, Blanhaerz, Lamimi, Naillebert, Haneko Burneko
Additional Tags: Grief/Mourning, Angst, Religion, Isolation, Loneliness, Patch 3.4: Soul Surrender Spoilers (Final Fantasy XIV), Elezen Warrior of Light, Female Warrior of Light, Canon-Typical Violence, Guilt, Emotional Repression, Child Neglect, Childhood Memories, Unresolved Sexual Tension
Series: With Lilies and With Laurel
Length: 88,715 / 92,000
Chapter: 14/15

Summary:

Heartbroken after the loss of his dearest companion, Urianger labors to save two worlds in which he has never felt more alone.

Notes:

If you're new here, please start with Chapter 1!

Final Fantasy XIV is owned by Square Enix. This is a non-commercial work of fanfiction.

( Read on AO3 )

...or below! )

Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories ([syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed) wrote2026-05-22 08:40 am

Lost elephant calf reunites with family after researchers track herd across Samburu reserve

Colorado State University Professor George Wittemyer and his research team reunited a 4-month-old elephant calf with her family after she wandered into a tourist camp alone. The orphaned elephant calf was disoriented from a bumpy truck ride and didn't immediately move toward the other elephants.
lauradi7dw: braid with ribbon (daenggi)
lauradi7dw ([personal profile] lauradi7dw) wrote2026-05-22 08:04 am

Licensed clips (or not)

The newest song by Le Sserafim has the Macarena in it, not just the tune but even the dance shows up in the music video. (There is also unrelated product placement in the music video. I like the video but it's not going to make me buy an Android or use google Gemini or Spotify). I'm not going to meditate, either.



I hope that proper licensing and payment happened.

OTOH, on the final Stephen Colbert show, the band played a bit of Vince Guaraldi's music from Peanuts without permission, in the hope that CBS will be hit with a large bill.
https://youtube.com/shorts/5vVh8DJcfyc?si=8Wg3MH0C8WrqVLsm
hudebnik: (Default)
hudebnik ([personal profile] hudebnik) wrote2026-05-22 07:32 am

(no subject)

Just got home from four days at Shawm Camp. We had a great time, played a lot of good music, and have somewhat better shawm chops than we did a week ago. And I'm thinking about things I could pass on to more-beginning shawm players, e.g. a Pennsic class entitled something like "Shawm Technique 102: Quotations from Chairman Bob". Or I might want to teach/lead a music-notation class, which I haven't done in a number of years. And apparently the deadline for getting classes into the printed schedule is this coming Monday, so I need to decide very quickly.

We woke up yesterday morning at Shawm Camp, packed the car, ate breakfast, said a bunch of goodbyes, drove to Indianapolis airport, flew to JFK (all the non-premium seats were taken by the time we checked in, so they put us in "Comfort Plus" seats with leg-room, no extra charge!), caught a cab home, partially unpacked, bought some groceries, ate dinner, drove to NJ to pick up the dogs, drove home with dogs.

Classes have been posted for Amherst, and they look pretty good; we're thinking of going to Amherst instead of SFEMS Med/Ren, so as to avoid a cross-country flight with instruments.

On the drive to and from retrieving the dogs, I listened to NPR talking to various economists and petro-analysts talking about the economic effects of the Iran war. Naturally, Trump still says the war will be over "very soon", and as soon as it is, "prices will plummet; there's so much oil out there." And his energy secretary says "In the long run, oil prices will probably be lower than they were before, because Iran will no longer have a nuclear weapons program. But in the short run, people are facing some discomfort."
Meanwhile, the reality-based community says that prices in various countries have already doubled or tripled ("some discomfort"), and when the Strait of Hormuz re-opens to shipping, it will take at least a month for new shipments of oil to reach refineries, and longer still before they reach consumers, and it will take at least a month to re-open oil fields that have been shut down due to lack of storage space, and it will take months or years to repair war damage to oil facilities, and it will take months or years for various countries to refill their oil reserves, and the already-locked-in shortages of fertilizer and helium will take months to work their ways through the supply chain to consumers, so prices won't actually come down for months or years if ever, and there's a good chance of recessions in various countries later this year. All because Trump invaded Iran in February with no more detailed plan than "decapitate the government and install a US puppet who will still be an oppressive Islamist dictator but will be scared into obeying us." It worked in Venezuela; why wouldn't it work in a much bigger, richer, more-anti-US, and more-militarized country in the Middle East? Anyway, the consensus seems to predict sharp price rises in Europe and Asia in June, and in the US in early July -- another reason not to fly to California in July.

We've been planning to go to a camping event this weekend to test our latest pavilion modifications before Pennsic. It's supposed to rain half an inch on Saturday, and another half an inch on Sunday, with high temperatures in the low 50's Fahrenheit... which I guess makes it a good test of the pavilion, but not a particularly appealing camp-out. So we're not sure about that.
pauraque: butterfly trailing a rainbow through the sky from the Reading Rainbow TV show opening (butterfly in the sky)
pauraque ([personal profile] pauraque) wrote2026-05-22 08:12 am

A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine (2019)

Mahit Dzmare is the fresh-faced new ambassador from a remote space station struggling to maintain its independence from the massive interstellar Teixcalaan Empire. What the Teixcalaanli diplomats don't know is that Mahit's mind carries the memories and personality of the previous ambassador alongside her own—and what Mahit doesn't know is that the old ambassador got up to a lot of sketchy stuff since the last time his mind files were backed up. Arriving on the Teixcalaan capital planet, Mahit finds that her predecessor has died in a *cough* "accident," and the sight of his own dead body in the morgue causes his uploaded personality to glitch out and Mahit loses contact with his memories. Now lacking the secret advantage she was supposed to have, Mahit must navigate labyrinthine court politics, figure out what the old ambassador did that got him killed, and save her home from imperial conquest.

On paper, this book checks all the boxes to make me love it. It's a queer anti-imperialist space opera with detailed worldbuilding and a premise that raises questions about identity and individuality! I was invested in the characters and I appreciated the unique flavor of the Aztec-inspired Teixcalaan culture.

And yet... I didn't love the book, I only kinda liked it. I enjoyed it while I was reading, but I found it easy to put down and easy to forget about when I wasn't reading it, and in the end I was left feeling lukewarm. I think there are three main reasons for that.

1. It's too much like Imperial Radch. And I love Imperial Radch! But I found this book not as compelling, surprising, or psychologically complex, and it misses a few of my narrative kinks that Imperial Radch hits dead on. (This book is queer all right, but it's not genderqueer, and the man's-memories-in-woman's-head premise is a big missed opportunity where it could have been.) I might have responded to this book more strongly if I hadn't read Imperial Radch first or if they hadn't been so similar in so many ways.

2. The pacing is sluggish, especially in the first half. Some points are needlessly belabored every time they come up, without being developed or expanded upon. Yes, I understand that Mahit has confused feelings about being a nerd for a culture that will never accept her and threatens her own culture's autonomy. Yes, I understand that she is having a hard time because her predecessor's memories aren't accessible. What else do you want to say about those things, author? It feels like ages go by where nothing is really shifting for the protagonist. I realize the events of the book only happen over a few days, but in that case maybe it's not necessary to restate where she's at emotionally at such length and frequency?

3. Several aspects of the ending seemed contrived.
plot spoilersI didn't buy that the insurrection would fizzle so easily as soon as Nineteen Adze became emperor. I also wasn't thrilled to see Twelve Azalea predictably killed off after I spent most of the book thinking "this guy only exists so you can kill off a character we like other than the main pair, doesn't he?" And look, I did want to see Mahit and Three Seagrass get together, but I don't think the intended slow burn was executed well. They're obviously into each other from the moment they meet, but the tension doesn't build or develop in any meaningful way until suddenly they kiss at the end, and then Mahit abruptly decides to leave the planet for no reason. I mean, yes, vague reasons are supplied, but I wasn't sure if I was supposed to take those reasons seriously, or if Mahit is just scared of intimacy. Should be good times for Three Seagrass now that her best friend's been murdered in front of her and the only other person she trusts is pulling this ridiculous "sorry but we can't be together because I need to ~find myself~" thing out of nowhere!

But hey, there's only one sequel, so I'll probably read it and at least see how it ends. (Given that Teixcalaan is Space Aztecs, the mysterious alien threat has to be Space Conquistadors, right?)
All Things Horror: From Movies & TV to Books & Games ([syndicated profile] allthingshorror_feed) wrote2026-05-22 11:21 am

Help me find this movie!

Posted by /u/iblu007

Ok, so I'm not sure if this is one of the paranormal activity movies cause I've skimmed all of them and could not find these scenes. All I remember is this American couple and the wife is pregnant, I'm not sure of the place they go to but I think it was a trip to a foreign country (possibly South America?) where they went to some sort of psychic/witch? I think they curse the wife and engrave some sort of symbol on her. Anyway, throughout the movie things go wrong, the unborn child is a demon (?) If I can recall, the whole thing was filmed found footage style. There was also another scene in a grocery store parking lot, can't remember exactly what happened there. Any help is appreciated!

submitted by /u/iblu007
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Ars Technica - All content ([syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed) wrote2026-05-22 11:30 am

First vaccines, now mammograms? RFK Jr.’s latest firings have doctors outraged.

Posted by Beth Mole

Top medical groups are outraged and alarmed that anti-vaccine Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has fired two leaders of an influential panel that makes recommendations and sets insurance coverage for preventive care—such as mammograms, colonoscopies, statin use, and depression screening.

On Wednesday, news broke that Kennedy had fired the two vice chairs of the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), leaving the critical, nonpartisan panel half empty. Typically, the task force is made of 16 independent, volunteer preventive medicine experts who serve four-year, overlapping terms. But with the new firings, USPSTF has eight vacancies, including the chair and vice chair positions.

Kennedy has already undermined the USPSTF's work by failing to replace members whose terms ended at the turn of the year, preventing the task force from meeting over the past year, and blocking it from releasing finalized recommendations on self-collected samples for cervical cancer screening.

Read full article

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Every Day Above Ground ([personal profile] mallorys_camera) wrote2026-05-22 08:07 am
Entry tags:

Dragons' Teeth



Did an enormous amount of weeding yesterday, and 15 minutes of wrestling with the hose, since the sky, though grey, showed little intention of actually raining. Very little actual planting, and planting is the fun part.

Fuckin' nettles are like those mythological dragons' teeth sown by Cadmus! If you're not nimble enough to pull out the entire root, a thousand new nettles spring up overnight from the mutilated stump of the original nettle.

###

Today I am off to the neurologist for a cognition test.

This is something I promised Ichabod I would do after the Wellbutrin overdose debacle in Ithaca last Thanksgiving.

No, I don't think my cognition is hovering anywhere near the dementia zone, but of course, I wouldn't, would I?

And I am at risk, I suppose: Both Jane and Annie, my mother's two sisters, had severe dementia at the end of their lives, and my maternal grandmother (whom I never met) was picked up smeared in feces wandering the trashcan circuit in Miami Beach a few decades back. My mother didn't have dementia, but she was definitely wayyyy eccentric, and maybe she would have developed it had she lived longer.

It's probably not a bad idea to have some sort of baseline here.

###

Also, apparently, RTT can perform marriages within the City of Ithaca.

Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories ([syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed) wrote2026-05-22 08:10 am

Why the intrinsic quantum effects of axion dark matter are completely undetectable

Dark matter is an elusive form of matter that almost never emits, absorbs or reflects light, while only weakly interacting with regular matter. These properties make it very difficult to detect using conventional experimental techniques and instruments.
The Mary Sue ([syndicated profile] the_mary_sue_feed) wrote2026-05-22 12:00 pm

Nevada woman says Costco worker wouldn’t stop asking her out. So she finally decides to give him a c

Posted by Ljeonida Mulabazi

store employee (l) woman shares Costco experiences (c) Costco storefront (r)

When going for a quick run to Costco, most people don’t expect to be hit on or asked out on a date. However, the reality of being a woman in public means romantic propositions can come from unlikely places.

In TikToker Celeste’s (@celestegrajedarojas) case, it allegedly came directly from a Costco worker.