Brie Larson as Kit in Unicorn Store (2019)
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Brie Larson as Kit in Unicorn Store (2019)
Today in “the sentiment is a good one but under the circumstances the punctuation could potentially cause confusion”: just to clarify, the story in question does not, repeat, does not involve a romantic relationship between Sherlock Holmes and HP Lovecraft.
well not with THAT attitude it doesn’t
I mean, if you WANT it to have meant that….there’s always…fanfiction.
Ok but Neil Gaiman KNOWS what the slash means don’t play dumb with me people
“From the script’s first draft, Larson says she noted the significance of women being involved, in all stages of the film’s creative process.”
I don’t know the source but amazing advice.
Well now I see the point of the yoga blocks! Thank you
How do you manage to always make your potatoes SO crispy? Is there like a basic technique you use for all your recipes? Your potatoes are uncannily crispy, its impossible.
Yes! There is absolutely a technique to this. Actually there are two ways to do it so I will list them.
1. The kinda-sorta-almost-healthy way: diced your potatoes into about quarter sized squares and soak them in a bowl of steaming hot water for ten minutes. During the last five minutes, put your frying pan on and add about 4 tbsps of oil (olive, canola, sunflower, whatever.) Then drain your potatoes, add seasoning to them and stir, and then drop them in the pan on medium high for about eight minutes, stirring frequently. Then you’re done!
2. The fucking delicious way: dice your potatoes into quarter sized slices and put about a half cup of oil into the bottom of a skillet, then turn it on medium high. Add your spices to your potatoes and mix, then add them to the pan. Stir until the oil evenly coats the potatoes (there should still be some standing in the pan) and then cover the pan with a lid and turn down the heat to medium low. Allow to simmer for about ten minutes. Then, after that time, use a colander to drain the oil out of the potatoes and put them back in the skillet, then turn the skillet up to a high heat setting. This will make them soft on the inside but crispy on the outside. I like to get them just a little blackened :) but I’m weird that way.
i made a thing
EDIT: If you found this useful, and want to use it in a classroom, you can! There is a clean version available for download HERE.
Also, please consider donating!
Reblogging again cuz it’s exam time!
an educational graphic about critical thinking for tumnblr
The all important journalist questions, and then some.
A missing line from Why:
“If you really want to be a critical reader, it turns out you have to step back one step further, and ask not just whether the author is telling the truth, but why he’s writing about this subject at all.“
That is an excellent addition.
One other one for How: “how could this be exploited by someone acting in bad faith?” Closely coupled with a What: “what are the limits on the ill-effects this could produce?”
And a quick check for double standards: “who, or what, is the speaker not applying this principle to?”
(This is also a great guide for interrogating historical documents such as, say, a constitution, a press release, a speech, a letter, a diary, a bill of rights, political policies, &c)
I need to grab this and adapt this for my little filmmaking courses.
Because these questions are equally indispensible when YOU are the author of the script, the book, the story, the speech.
dormouse11:
seeminglycaptivating:
A little tip for parents with children in school (or for children in school to show their parents)
My mom gave me and my sister two days every semester that she called “mental health days.”
Those were days, that for ANY reason, and without having to tell my mom the reason, we could skip the day of school. We’d just tell her we were taking a mental health day and she’d call the school and let them know we were not coming in.
#1 This helped keep our grades up by lowering our stress levels. I never got a C in any grade school class. The majority of my classes I received A’s. I also took 4 AP classes and they were not weighted. Trust me, it made a difference.
#2 I never felt the need to skip school. I knew if I ever wanted to or needed to my mom would help me.
Your kids are young and need time to recover. They need some days where they can do nothing but stay in bed for no reason. They need their own space where their privacy is respected. It will make a huge difference.
I would like to add something to this for the teachers too! (I may have already told this story on tumblr but OH WELL I’m telling it again)
One of my math teachers in high school had a policy called The Red Beanbags of Don’t Bother Me. He kept a pile of red beanbags on his desk, and at any time of the day you could go over and take one. From that point on, as long as you were in his classroom with a beanbag on your desk, no one could bother you. He wouldn’t call on you to answer problems, no students were allowed to talk to you, and perhaps most importantly, no one could ask why you took a bean bag that day. The only caveat was that if you used the beanbag more than three times in a semester you had to go talk to the school counselor about it.
I only used the beanbag a handful of times during those 4 years, but it was a godsend when I needed it. I knew people who would camp in his classroom during lunch (or even skip class and stay there all day) under the protection of the beanbag. As a teacher there’s not always a lot you can do for a student suffering mental illness/emotional abuse/ other struggles, but giving them some space and privacy in your class can make a HUGE difference.
Workout For Daily Life
So I used a new icebreaker today and it went really well. I got it from this blog (x). It’s really great for getting kids to work in teams. I’ve already got them set up in their Classcraft teams (even though we can’t actually get signed up for Classcraft until tomorrow), and I think it generally worked really well to get them to bond.
Here’s the gist: Have each team write 30 things they all have in common on index cards. (I’m lucky in that our team has a ludicrous number of index cards hoarded. I don’t know who ordered them, but no one uses them in the bulk numbers we have.) They start off really silly (”We all have…eyes!”), but eventually they get into some slightly more personal stuff (”None of us has ever had a cavity”). It lets them see immediately that even though the people in their group may not be their best friends, they have at least a few things in common.
Then you have them build a card house/tower/whatever out of the index cards. I told them they couldn’t use any adhesives, but they were allowed to fold the cards. I was thinking of Cardhalla at Gen Con (where elaborate card structures are built and then destroyed for charity).
Anyway, I think it did the trick in most cases. Another nice thing is that almost all the kids experienced failure when their first attempt fell down. They all started with the same idea, then when each structure failed, they changed tactics and learned from their failure.
This tactic doesn’t work well, and it was the first thing every single group tried.
The best structure of the day!
I think I’m going to take a little time tomorrow to explicitly talk about how that illustrates a growth mindset. Very few kids gave up after the first (or second or third) time their structure fell. I even heard a kid say, “Adapt. Improvise. Overcome,” which was pretty great.
I’m going to unashamedly steal the crap out of this. Did you think 30 was a good amount, or might it work better with more/less?
Please do! I think it would work with more, but probably not with less. I think a time limit on both the index card writing and the structure building would be helpful too
This is awesome! A perfect Kingdom Day activity for the beginning of school. Thanks for sharing it.
Am definitely stealing this
good types of alone time:
“decadence”
rewatch pride & prejudice (2005 or 1995, your pick)
take a long shower & shave legs
stare at face in mirror for a long time, reflect on changes that have occured in past year
sara bareilles cd on repeat
“deep mystery”
lying on the floor listening to music you liked fifteen years ago
watch dust motes travel across the room in the late afternoon haze
what would be different about my life if i had been a cheerleader in high school?
what was the title of that book you read in the fourth grade? you only remember the main character’s name and nothing about the plot. you spend the next three hours googling and then you drop $60 for a first edition on ebay
cup of tea, then another
are you there god?
“efficiency”
take out five boxes of paperwork from the closet and spend the next three hours making small piles around your body on the floor
write first chapter of novel
cover wall in post it notes
lists lists lists
highlight everything
now’s a good time to start that bullet journal
must empty email inbox
plan out next five years of life down to the month, week, day
“shake it up”
blast nsync while scrubbing out microwave
rearrange living room four different ways
today’s a good day to repaint your bedroom
let’s research and plan a trip to san francisco
develop new fashion style, must throw away all items of clothes that don’t work with it
“rain day”
light candle, open windows, put on sweater
reread old favorite book
pet a cat
listen to jewel cd
“the books assigned to us don’t have any REAL meaning”
yeah, i know. i am an author, i felt that keenly through my entire academic career; i hated knowing it wasn’t the case. that i was being lied to.
but we make meaning. the first time someone read into my writing and found something i hadn’t put there, i found myself smiling. oh yeah! it felt good. it felt good they tore it open and plucked something out. it felt like i had done my job well. and they felt good, too.
a lot of books assigned in school won’t have something you see yourself in. they’re general books, or they’re forced in by how cheap they are, or they are just good examples of one type of writing. it is frustrating writing essays about them, like pretending you are panning for gold while you are ankle deep in a plastic pool. these are things that were made for other people, for another time, for a different set of hands. we cannot force ourselves to be kin to what is unlike us. our skin rejects it.
but we make meaning. there will be books - and maybe some will even be assigned - that will not be intentionally written for you, but they will feel that way, down in your ribs, like when you catch your reflection in a store front and for a second don’t recognize who you are. there will be art and dances and songs (god, so many songs) that will do this, over and over and over and over, because our hearts are these big things that love to grab onto any sign we are not alone. that our pain and our losses are not unnoticed. they will be the books you hold differently and the songs you scream along to and the art you cry about in the middle of the museum. and these same books and songs and art pieces will be looked at by other people and those people will say “there’s no meaning here. i don’t get it.”
sometimes, sometimes, i do have a meaning i tuck into words. and sometimes even if i think the meaning is one thing, someone will tell me: here is another. and every time this happens, i am 13 again, and i feel good, and i know i made something worth loving. worth looking at. people come to me and they say: i know you don’t know me, but you know me. and i do know you, because we know each other, because a piece of writing is a two-way looking glass, where you see me, and in that honesty, i hope you get to see yourself, too.
somewhere, tucked into this, chewing on itself, is something i like to remind myself. when i am at the end of the rope, when i am scratching old wounds, when i am trying to untie my tether because none of it matters, i say: we make meaning. and i think of the books that i love that others do not. i think of the flowers that mean things to me that i cannot spell and you cannot know. i think of what i have given meaning to, and who has given me meaning. and i tell myself. yes, this is a dark time. but we will take it and we’ll put it on a loom and we’ll weave ourself something out of it, and we’ll make meaning from this life. i will give meaning to others when i can and i will write and hope others find meaning and i will live like i am meaning to, because if i’m stuck here, i mean to live.
no, maybe it doesn’t mean anything. but maybe it’s just the wrong book. go on. keep looking.
Today in “Sea Shanties I Have On Repeat”, what dark magic did this man have to perform to get this voice?? This is the voice of Poseidon himself. Damn.
It’s like if a foghorn came to life and had perfect pitch, it would be that guy. What a goddamn delight.
Here’s the Mainly Norfolk page on the song (’Bully’ in this case means drunk, not a ruffian)
https://mainlynorfolk.info/watersons/songs/bullyinthealley.html
This got about 1000% better when I turned the sound on
I call this “tiktoks that would have been vines”
happy lunar new year, friendly reminder that jimmy kimmel and ellen degeneres inviting marie kondo on to their show to “tidy up” their writer’s rooms only to dismiss her advice, belittle her methods, make fun of her use of a translator, and act like ungrateful children in the face of her genuine attempts to help is literally the most basic form of Othering from white people. It’s another form of commodification by white people of non-white cultures that is being willingly shared, and it doesn’t get any less racist when it comes from “progressives”, be they a liberal white woman or a “Woke” news pundit
like she’s already being attacked and villainised into this aggressive book-burning harpy by white people on twitter who thinks having a full bookshelf can substitute having a personality, and now mainstream network talk shows are coming after her as well.
I don’t care if you think “this is just how Degeneres/Kimmel does comedy”, I don’t care if they did it for laughs. The overall tone of their segment is to show their reaction; to show how ridiculous and childish they find the KonMari method. We get it, white liberals don’t have time for wishy-washy Japanese mindfulness woo-woo and their enlightened views make them too rational to take seriously any other cultures that are based in spirituality and animism
Kimmel made a long, over-winded joke that deliberately put both Marie and her translator into an embarrassing situation, deliberately highlighting and mocking Marie’s lack of English, and then mocked the Shinto cultural background that Marie’s methods come from. Ellen’s writer acted as if Marie was going to overturn his office, then shoves Kim Kardashian’s ass into Marie’s face, then admit that he’s going “put everything back anyway” after Maries leaves. Both of them act as if her “greeting ritual” was some form of Weird Hokey Japanese Gimmick.
White “progressive liberal voices” are turning non-white cultures either into a commodity or into a joke without any self-reflection or foresight into the damage they’re potentially doing. They take no care in the hurt that they as white comedians are sowing; in turning Marie’s traditional Japanese cultural values and contexts into a joke, they’re making the act of othering and disrespecting non-white cultures more normative and easier to do. Their activism and political commentary is nothing but performative white bullshit.
When we share don’t share our cultures, white people turn it into a hip commodity, then cry PC-gone-mad when we take offense. When we willingly share our cultures, it gets turned into a punchline. It doesn’t matter if the dismissal and commodification come from someone wearing a MAGA cap or a white liberal icon; the lack of respect still stems from the same root of privilege.
and then look at how Hassan Minhaj treats Marie Kondo when she comes to her house and helps him orginise his office and daughters play room.
an excerpt, and you can watch it on Netflix already:
i was really upset when i found out she got disrespected on Ell*n Degenerate and K*mmel.. i’m glad though that the majority of the comments under their videos and segments mentioned how they were in bad taste and even called it racist. it’s good that alot of people seem to have caught on that
i’m also glad to find out that besides this really adorable one with Hasan, she got a respectful segment with Stephen Colbert. he even mentioned her achievements and how she is influential
i also appreciate how Colbert said that they’d be having a translator today because his Japanese is rusty and said that he knows that Kondo’s English is much better.. that was really refreshing to hear because alot of times people associate a need for the translator for the person who struggles to speak or understand English but Colbert’s lexical choice implies a much more profound and respectful thought
that being said, 2 good American appearances doesn’t mean that the problems and issues OP raised are already solved. we really have to be aware about this and use our voices to educate people and dismantle these racist, xenophobic, and misogynistic ideals, which are linked to the backlash Marie Kondo undeservedly received
Before this, historians could only link 22 of the presidents to King John. Professional genealogists had only traced the male family lines, but BridgeAnne was able to link all but one of the presidents together using both male and female ancestry.
She’s not in 7th grade anymore, but now she has her own website.
Source
this just in: professional genealogists fundamentally misunderstand parentage, completely and totally ignore women, are schooled by 13yo girl