Jan. 2nd, 2026

thewayne: (Default)
[PLEASE post on your LJ account(s) and communities, if you have such, so as many people as possible know about this!]

It looks like the Putin government is getting ready to lock their social media sites in to Russian posters only and to require social media credits. Dream Width is doing what they can to smooth transferring LJ users over, and there are other sites that are LJ clones, but I can't name them. I think Insane Journal was one, I have no idea if they're still around. I moved to DW nine years ago this January and have no particular problems with it, and I would expect that Europeans would have no issues with payment.

This Bluesky post explains what's going on, and comments dig deeper and discuss alternative archive methods.
https://bsky.app/profile/rahaeli.bsky.social/post/3mbebi2xfxc25

This LJ post explains things - in Russian. Google Translate should handle switching it into the language of your choice.
https://ru-news.livejournal.com/80899.html

I do hope you switch to DW. I know some of you are Facebookers, and if you decide to go there, I wish you well. I do not and will not use Meta properties.

Happy new year indeed.

When a date is announced for this lockout to go live, I will be deleting my account. My DW account is under this name, TheWayne.
thewayne: (Default)
Every January 1, in the USA, a number of copyrighted works lose their protection and become public domain! This year has a pretty neat list - Dashiell Hammett! Miss Marple! The Marx Brothers! Lots of neat things.

And obviously this isn't everything that's coming free of copyright protection, just a list of a few of some significant works. They're already free in some countries: Canada and Australia have shorter copyright terms.

BOOKS
Cakes and Ale
William Faulkner, As I Lay Dying
Dashiell Hammett, The Maltese Falcon (the full book version)
Agatha Christie, The Murder at the Vicarage (the first novel featuring Miss Marple)
Carolyn Keene (pseudonym for Mildred Benson), the first four Nancy Drew books, beginning with The Secret of the Old Clock
Watty Piper (pen name of Arnold Munk), The Little Engine That Could (the popular illustrated version, with drawings by Lois Lenski)
William H. Elson, Elson Basic Readers (the first appearances of Dick and Jane)
Noël Coward, Private Lives
T.S. Eliot, Ash Wednesday
Evelyn Waugh, Vile Bodies
John Dos Passos, The 42nd Parallel
Edna Ferber, Cimarron
Dorothy L. Sayers, Strong Poison
J. B. Priestley, Angel Pavement
Olaf Stapledon, Last and First Men
Sigmund Freud, Civilization and Its Discontents (in the original German, Das Unbehagen in der Kultur)
Elizabeth Coatsworth (author) and Lynd Ward (illustrator), The Cat Who Went to Heaven
Arthur Ransome, Swallows and Amazons
W. Somerset Maugham, Cakes and Ale
Bertrand Russell, The Conquest of Happiness

CHARACTERS, COMICS, CARTOONS
Flip the Frog
Betty Boop from Fleischer Studios' Dizzy Dishes and other cartoons
Rover (later renamed Pluto) from Disney's The Chain Gang (as an unnamed bloodhound) and The Picnic (as Rover)
Blondie and Dagwood from the Blondie comic strips by Chic Young
Flip the Frog from Fiddlesticks and other cartoons, by Ub Iwerks after he left Disney
Nine new Mickey Mouse cartoons, the initial week of Mickey Mouse comic strips, and ten new Silly Symphonies cartoons from Disney

FILMS
The Divorcee
All Quiet on the Western Front, directed by Lewis Milestone (winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture)
King of Jazz, directed by John Murray Anderson (musical revue featuring Paul Whiteman and Bing Crosby’s first feature-film appearance)
Cimarron, directed by Wesley Ruggles (winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture, registered for copyright in 1930)
Animal Crackers, directed by Victor Heerman (starring the Marx Brothers)
Soup to Nuts, directed by Benjamin Stoloff (written by Rube Goldberg, featuring later members of The Three Stooges)
Morocco, directed by Josef von Sternberg (starring Gary Cooper, Marlene Dietrich, and Adolphe Menjou)
The Blue Angel (Der blaue Engel), directed by Josef von Sternberg (starring Marlene Dietrich)
Anna Christie, directed by Clarence Brown (Greta Garbo’s first talkie)
Hell's Angels, directed by Howard Hughes (Jean Harlow’s film debut)
The Big Trail, directed by Raoul Walsh (John Wayne’s first leading role)
The Big House, directed by George Hill
Murder!, directed by Alfred Hitchcock
L'Âge d'Or, directed by Luis Buñuel, written by Buñuel and Salvador Dalí
Free and Easy, directed by Edward Sedgwick (Buster Keaton’s first speaking role)
The Divorcee, directed by Robert Z. Leonard
Whoopee!, directed by Thornton Freeland

MUSICAL COMPOSITIONS
The Royal Welch Fusiliers
Four Songs - I Got Rhythm, I've Got a Crush on You, But Not for Me, and Embraceable You - with lyrics by Ira Gershwin, music by George Gershwin
Georgia on My Mind, lyrics by Stuart Gorrell, music by Hoagy Carmichael
Dream a Little Dream of Me, lyrics by Gus Kahn, music by Fabian Andre and Wilbur Schwandt
Livin' in the Sunlight, Lovin' in the Moonlight, lyrics by Al Lewis, music by Al Sherman
On the Sunny Side of the Street, lyrics by Dorothy Fields, music by Jimmy McHugh
It Happened in Monterey, lyrics by Billy Rose, music by Mabel Wayne
Body and Soul, lyrics by Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton, music by Johnny Green
Just a Gigolo (the first English translation), original German lyrics by Julius Brammer, English translation by Irving Caesar, music by Leonello Casucci
You're Driving Me Crazy, lyrics and music by Walter Donaldson
Beyond the Blue Horizon, lyrics by Leo Robin, music by Richard A. Whiting and W. Franke Harling (possible inspiration for the Star Trek theme song)
The Royal Welch Fusiliers, by John Philip Sousa


Lots of good stuff that creative types can play with without fear of any sort of legal reprisal! The first appearance of Betty Boop, and the original version of Disney's Pluto, then called Rover. It's interesting to see the evolutions of characters, like how Mickey evolved from Steamboat Willy.

https://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/publicdomainday/2026/

https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/01/01/1712212/public-domain-day-2026-brings-betty-boop-nancy-drew-and-i-got-rhythm-into-the-commons
thewayne: (Default)
Looks like I made about 66 books last year. The number is a bit fungible as that includes manga collections, Hugo reads - what's the difference between novellas and novelettes, etc, and some other things that just make my head hurt. I temporarily set aside some stuff due to events in December and switched to comfort reads, i.e. Terry Pratchett, and seem to be continuing in on that for the foreseeable future until something else distracts me.

The list is inverted so I don't have to scroll through it when I finish a new book. Much easier to update that way!

The year began with continuing Lois McMaster Bujold's Vorkosigan series re-read and continued from there. I'm not going to talk about things in detail, but will discuss anything if people want to talk about something in comments. A few notable things, though....

01/29 The Last Nine Days of The Bismarck, CS Forester (HB,NF). This is one that came across my desk at work as an interlibrary loan. First, the author. Forester of the Hornblower series. It's a short book, you can probably polish it off, uninterrupted, in three or four hours. VERY interesting read! Obviously C.S. is a master of naval writing, and this book is a good example. The British were desperate to not let the Bismarck get out into the Atlantic where it could wreak havoc on all Allied shipping, they dedicated pretty much everything they had to finding and sinking that ship. And while they did succeed, it was quite the fight. And quite the read.

02/18 Tokyo Vice, Jake Addelstein (nf). This book is an autobiographical book about Jake's career as a crime beat reporter in Tokyo, mainly reporting about yakuza activity in Tokyo and Japan. It took me a while to compose that sentence, because it's a complicated book. I like books about Japan, I like Japanese culture. And this book is real. In places, it can be rather disturbing as it is honestly written. There is violence and murder in it, it spans years. Will I re-read it? No. It expanded my view of Japan and was interesting, not that I needed any additional prompting to know not to get involved with the yakuza.

02/26 Adios Muchachos, Daniel Chavarria. This is an amusing read, and a one-shot book, though Chavarria has written many books. It's about a Havana prostitute with an amazing butt and a rigged bicycle that she can make fall apart on command. She uses it to 'have an accident' in front of a mark to seduce them and get them into a longish-term relationship. She has a whole script she works on her marks, a program of seduction to make it long-term to make it very profitable, and it works quite well for her and her mother, but with the current mark it gets complicated when someone, a non-Cuban, accidentally dies, and she and the mark have to figure out how to deal with the body in a way to avoid police involvement. As layers get peeled back things become increasingly complicated and amusing for the reader.

02/28 The Shambling Guide to New York City, Mur Lafferty. Also The Shambling Guide to New Orleans. Young woman needs a job, replies to an advert seeking a writer for a traveler's guide for NYC. The office tries to put her off, saying they're really not what they're looking for, but she's insistent as rent is coming due and she is desperate for the job. Finally they hire her on a provisional basis. Turns out they are publishing a 'differently animated' guide for undead, werewolves, vampires, etc.: i.e. a world that she didn't really know existed. VERY entertaining! Mur is an excellent writer, I highly recommend her! Shambling Guide continues the series, and I think she intended the series to go on - and it may yet - but it ends at two books.

Andy Weir's Artemis and Project Hail Mary. I read these two books back-to-back. I read The Martian when it came out and really enjoyed it, loved the movie. But these books? I have to say that I'm feeling that Andy is, to me, coming off as a one trick pony and feels too much to be writing different versions of the same character of the same astronaut from Martian. Only this time it's a black girl on the Moon. And now it's a white teacher who's now Earth's last hope. Competence porn. I have no problem with a NASA astronaut going to the Moon or Mars being hyper-competent. Their life and the lives of everyone else on the mission depends on their knowing everything about pretty much every aspect of all of their equipment depends on that competency. But a teen girl born on the moon? Yes, she'd be taught from an early age about emergency drills and such, but she wouldn't have an intimate knowledge about a lot of that stuff. And the guy in Hail Mary? Yes, he has a laptop of everything ever digitized on Earth. Good luck searching it! Ask any librarian how much fun they have searching for information. Sorry, those two books rate as weak sauce for me and aren't going to rate very high as likely re-reads.


The rest of the books:
Read more... )
thewayne: (Default)


We saw Postmodern Jukebox in El Paso on December 2, and they are freaking AMAZING! Highly recommend them. Gunhild was one of three vocalist performing, and she is absolutely a hoot. I'm in the process of ripping six CDs that I ordered a week ago. For whatever reason, I pulled up some PMJ on YouTube and found her name and came across this particular vid and had to post it.

Among the pieces that she did in El Paso, she simultaneously played a trumpet AND an upright bass! She balanced the trumpet on her lips - I can't even bend my back/head back to do that - while picking the bass!

Very cool and impressive.

Anyways, if you like big band jazz, and modern(ish) songs set to big band jazz-type music, you really ought to go see Postmodern Jukebox if they swing by your neighborhood. From what I understand, they have two bands sweeping through the USA and one through Europe and the rest of the world!

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