Planet Iron Blogger SF

May 13, 2025

Doctor Popular

The Mystery of the Wheatpasted Flier

We’re hosting another Cartoonist Conspiracy meetup in San Francisco tomorrow night, so I asked my friend Mike to design a new flier. I printed 15 copies, hand-colored each one, and posted them around the neighborhood using staples or tape.

To the best of my recollection, I didn’t whip up a big batch of wheatpaste and plaster our fliers around town.

So imagine my surprise when I walked past the old Big Lots on Mission Street and saw one of our fliers wheatpasted to the wall.

A flier for the May 13th meetup of the San Francisco Cartoonist Conspiracy. The flier is attached to the wall using wheatepaste. Some of the edges are missing because the flier was originally stapled to a wall, but was then removed from the wall and reattached using this wheatpaste glue.

I have no idea how it got there. I’m certain it’s the same flier hand-colored and stapled about 20 feet south of where it was glued to a wall.

A flier for the San Francisco Cartoonist Conspiracy that has been stapled to a wall. This flier has some sections that have been colored with a red marker and it appears to be the same flier in the wheatpaste photo. a photo of the original flier, stapled to another part of the wall

The Big Lots wall has been a longtime hotspot for posters and creative street art. I walk past it often and usually see people putting up massive wheatpasted ads: new product launches, big festivals, shitty crypto scams. The folks who install these large corporate ads don’t have a reputation for respecting what’s already on the wall… they tend to paste over anything in their way.

Which is why I don’t think it was them.

Maybe someone was out wheatpasting fliers for punk shows, saw our cartoonist flier, and decided to give it an upgrade?

Whoever you are: thanks! You added a little mystery to my day and a little more longevity to our flier.

The post The Mystery of the Wheatpasted Flier appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 13, 2025 01:33 AM

May 12, 2025

Certainly Strange

Doodle Bops

One of my favorite things in the Bay Area is “Instant Band Night,” where musicians randomly get assigned to be in a “band” together. They have 5 minutes to plan what to play, and then they immediately go on stage and play a 5 minute song. It is incredible and beautiful and vulnerable. I always … Continue reading "Doodle Bops"

by Steen at May 12, 2025 04:10 AM

Doctor Popular

The Distinctive Flier Art of “Walls, Only” in San Francisco

Listen to an audio version of this post, read by the author

Once you notice the “Walls, Only” fliers around San Francisco, you start seeing them everywhere. I’ve lived in SF for nearly twenty years, but it wasn’t until halfway through that I really noticed one of these fliers. Since then, I’ve spent the past decade obsessively documenting them whenever I can.

For transparency: I called the Walls, Only number a few years ago while researching this article. The person I spoke with was extremely friendly, but asked me to keep our entire conversation off the record. So everything mentioned here is purely based on my own observations after years of collecting these pieces. Basically, this is the article I would have written before I ever chatted with them.

The look and feel of “Walls, Only” fliers

These fliers are typically black and white, on 8.5×11″ paper, that advertise interior house painting for “as low as $59 a room”. Some are text heavy, some have a strong image with a silly phrase, most have the number “1-415-799-1193” on them. Many of these fliers prominently feature the words Walls, Only, which is also how I refer to this artist when talking about the fliers, though they sometimes use names like William or Paul.

Although some of the fliers have digital elements, there’s also a distinctly handmade element too, as if they were cut with scissors and assembled by hand before being photocopied. The text is often slightly askew, and you can sometimes spot the faint lines where paper was cut and glued to the master image. Along with their eye-catching graphics, the fliers often feature intriguing slogans that immediately grab your attention, like: “Once a cool thing is done, it can’t be undone.”

A close up of a A house painting advertisement by Walls Only that shows a photo of Evel Knievel with text that says A house painting flier that shows an old black and white photo of a drive in movie theater. Text written on the movie screen says A flier that says A house painting flier on a post. It shows a silhouette of a deer, with text that says A close up of one of the pull off tabs on the Deer Crossing poster. This has all the same text as the main poster, but is about 75% smaller, so it can be ripped off and carried seperately. A black and white poster promoting Walls Only's housepainting. It is text heavy, with no additional graphics. It says A poster for a house painting service. The text says

Tabs upon tabs

Another common feature of these fliers is that they often have removable tabs that are like miniature versions of the flier itself. So there will be a square layout on the top of the flier, with smaller tabs at the bottom that are almost identical to the large poster. This meta element of the fliers was even parodied by a Twitter user a few years back when they made a fake flier consisting of tabs upon tabs.

A tweet from Nick Robinson in 2018 that says

The Mysterious Comma

This cut-and-paste technique begins to get a little meta when you start seeing parts of previous fliers getting cut-up and re-used later. I think this explains one of the biggest mysteries of the current generation of “Walls, Only”, which always have a little comma mark at the bottom left edge of the “O” in “Only”. I believe the person who designed the fliers started off by writing “Walls Only”, then one day added a comma for some reason, then another day cut the image in a way where the comma and the O overlapped. Without realizing it, they kept re-using that particular cut up section of text, and eventually it became a sort of logo. If you look back at older posters, you can see the comma wasn’t there, then you can see a few fliers where there was a comma added, then you see all the newer fliers have the comma merged into the “O” like some sort of diacritic character.

A house painting flier by A flier on a post that lists the number 415-709-1193 and then says

The older fliers

Of course, these Walls, Only fliers weren’t always as stylized. A search for this phone number on Google revealed a bunch of old flier designs from 2000-2015 that have some of the early building blocks of the Walls, Only fliers we see today.

A photo from Michael Macor in the SF Chronicle (link below) that shows two people leaning against a street pole in front of a large warehouse. In this photo, you can see a Walls Only flier taped to the post. 
https://www.sfchronicle.com/entertainment/article/DoReMi-Creating-an-arts-oasis-in-a-forbiddingly-6165659.phpvia The SF Chronicle 2015 An SF311 complaint about a sign taped to a post in San Francisco. The sign is a Walls Only flier. Screenshot A flier offering to paint a room or house in exchange for a working vehicle. The phone number on this sign matches Walls Only's number. a photo via Uniwatt on Trip Advisor (link to source at bottom). The photo is of the interior of a cafe, with a few of Walls Only's posters taped up near the cash register. This photo is from 2015. 
https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60713-d536707-Reviews-Simple_Pleasures_Cafe-San_Francisco_California.html#/media/536707/?albumid=101&type=ALL_INCLUDING_RESTRICTED&category=101via Simple Pleasures review on Tripadvisor A handwritten flier that offers a van for sale. The number on the flier is Walls Only's number.

Re-imagining “Walls, Only”

Over the years of collecting these fliers, I’ve found other artifacts online by folks who have also been inspired by Walls, Only‘s art. Like Krishnapriya Dutta, a design student who was asked to” find a sign and recreate it” as a school project. She created a full brand book and mock up ads, which look very nice, but I think they also show how effective the original fliers are for standing out. The art and layout aren’t fancy, but the intriguing text and images are what really make Walls, Only fliers stand out from other adverts. By using repetition of phrases like “Nice room, wrong color” or “Walls Only”, sometimes even copy/pasting from previous fliers, Walls, Only has managed to develop a recognizable brand.

A mockup of an advertisement for William Painting Solutions. The text is neon green on a pink background. There is a quote on the ad that says

Once A Cool Thing is Done

It’s easy to overlook the small things around us, but if you take the time to look, art really is everywhere. From handyman signs to graffiti, there’s creativity hidden all around us… you just have to know to look for it. I know Walls, Only is ultimately doing what any business does: trying to stand out with eye-catching marketing. But I genuinely appreciate the thought and craftsmanship that goes into each flier. If these things are going to be plastered on every corner, I’m glad they’re at least fun to look at.

A

The post The Distinctive Flier Art of “Walls, Only” in San Francisco appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 12, 2025 04:01 AM

May 11, 2025

Doctor Popular

Using Yo-Yo Tricks To Fool A Magician

The newest episode of my PopCast yo-yo vlog is a combination of two different hobbies: Yo-yoing and Magic. I created a couple of yo-yo-inspired magic tricks and showed them to Andrew Evans, owner of the Magic Patio, to see if he could figure them out.

Also available ad-free on Peertube. https://spectra.video/w/kNNZJEoAKUKYeLiyfQLHsc

The post Using Yo-Yo Tricks To Fool A Magician appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 11, 2025 09:37 PM

May 10, 2025

I before E except Gleitzman

May 07, 2025

Monoprinciples

Integration requires less

“To have what you want, you must first be who you truly are.”
–Tim Grover

The math of meaning is surprisingly simple: The more you accumulate, the harder it becomes to tell a cohesive story. (Because Complication accelerates knowledge loss.) So tell a focused story. You’re not a magazine, you are a monograph, an integrated narrative. And integration requires less.

Embrace ruthless elimination. Choice sounds like expansion, but its true power is in reduction. You can’t do everything and You can’t be good at everything and that means you can do what you want and you can be what you want.

Sho Kuwamoto, Figma

The art of becoming is the art of selection: Choose a path from infinite possibilities (and don’t leave out the impossible), let the others face into non-existence. You must learn to discern what belongs in your life or not.

The story of a life is improved with depth, coherence, and a singular voice. It’s not improved by cramming it with as many characters, elements, and ideas as possible (you heard me, Marvel). Complexity fragments; simplicity unifies.

When you have the courage to declare what you are not, you are reward with integration. To is, you must know what you ain’t. Life is not about becoming more, it’s about becoming more yourself.

by V Sri at May 07, 2025 03:30 PM

May 05, 2025

Certainly Strange

Fancy-Pants Dinner

Doc and I went to a fancy dinner in North Beach recently for date night. It was really nice, and we also got to see the places in the area we rarely get to (because they are in North Beach, alas). We perused Al’s Attire and checked out the Fishtank Gallery with its art vending … Continue reading "Fancy-Pants Dinner"

by Steen at May 05, 2025 03:32 AM

I before E except Gleitzman

May 04, 2025

Doctor Popular

Making Protest Signs Without the Stress (Even If Your Handwriting Is a Mess)

As someone with terrible handwriting, I dread writing anything by hand… especially a big sign that’s going to be on display at a march or protest.

So here’s a little hack I use to help remove that anxiety: I lay out my text on an iPad, then trace it directly onto poster paper using an app called TracingMat. That’s it. No printers, no rulers, no graphic design degree required.

If you want to see exactly how I do it, I made a quick video:

Here’s what I use:

  • iPad or other tablet
  • TracingMat (not sponsored, I just like it)
  • Poster paper
  • Pencil
  • Marker (I love the Magic Ink 670, but Sharpies work too)
  • Optional but nice:
    • white-out pen (Pentel Presto is nice)
    • eraser
    • paint pens (Uniball Paint are great)
    • glitter?

This method is fast, calming, and honestly kind of satisfying. You get nice, bold, readable signs. If you have any other hacks or tips for signs, let me know!

An ad-free version of the video is also available on PeerTube https://spectra.video/w/gNBuHPAZVPyxRn1Sr1mxQa

The post Making Protest Signs Without the Stress (Even If Your Handwriting Is a Mess) appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 04, 2025 04:40 PM

May 02, 2025

Doctor Popular

recent music finds on Bandcamp

In celebration of , when Bandcamp waives their revenue share and passes the funds directly to artists, here’s a list of recent releases I’ve really enjoyed:

Why?- “Ocracoke”

I love how Why?’s musical style has changed over the years, but sometimes miss the raw sound of his early Anticon stuff. This track perfectly scratches that itch.

And if you haven’t heard it yet, Why?’s newest album, “The Well I Fell Into” is one of his best albums yet.

The Well I Fell Into by WHY?

ShyGodwin- “American Circus”

A short new track from one of my favorite new grunge/punk/metal bands. If you like this track, but want something longer, I’d highly recommend “Do What You Want” and “New Enemies“.

american circus by ShyGodwin

Show Me The Body- “Corpus II EP”

Corpus II is actually two short EPs (Corpus II Ep I and Corpus II Ep II) that were released separately, but are sometimes collected onto one EP on some streaming services. I like to listen to them back to back, like an album, but if I had to pick, I’d say “Corpus II Ep I” is my favorite of the two. Corpus II features some bass heavy loops, with a heavy doom vibe at times and a Rage Against The Machine vibe at others. I’m a new SMTB fan, but they have a huge catalog to dig into. There’s some fantastic talent on their record label too, which tends to skew towards industrial noise and metal. If you liked these EPs, maybe check out some of their live footage on Youtube.

Corpus II is actually two short EPs (Corpus II Ep I and Corpus II Ep II) released separately, though some streaming services combine them. I like listening to them back to back like a full album, but if I had to pick, Corpus II Ep I is my favorite. Expect bass-heavy loops, industrial beats, with vocals that feel a bit Rage Against The Machine inspired. I’m a new SMTB fan, but their catalog is deep and their label features lots of excellent industrial/noise/metal artists.

CORPUS II EP I by Show Me The Body

Tunde Adebimpe- “Thee Black Boltz”

A fantastic debut solo album from TV on the Radio’s frontman. Some really solid electro-pop throughout.

Hot Dad- “Rap Is Back”

A really bizarre new comedy record from Hot Dad that is unironically good. The premise: soft-rock songs that celebrate rap music. Sounds like it shouldn’t work, but it totally does.

Rap Is Back by Hot Dad

Fishboy- “Waitsgiving”

Fishboy is a storyteller, musician, and illustrator who manages to combine all of those elements into his music. Each album is a concept album built around a large set of characters in an interesting place. I’m not sure, but I think the albums themselves all tie together too, creating a huge world. Fans of the Mountain Goat’s “Best Ever Death Metal Band Out Of Denton” will really love Fishboy’s storytelling.

Waitsgiving by Fishboy

Damag3- “Put A Landlord In A Landfill”

One of my favorite Damag3 tracks yet, this beat is insane and the features bring their A-game. Get it.

PUT A LANDLORD iN A LANDFiLL by DAMAG3

AtariMatt- “Don’t Fuck With A User”

Composed entirely on a couple of Atari 2600s, this heavy sounding chiptune album was inspired by the movie “Tron”.

Don't Fuck With A User by Atarimatt

Black Moth Super Rainbow- “Soft New Magic Dream”

Pre-order the new album from Black Moth Super Rainbow and get most of the tracks today. Nothing too revolutionary about this record compared to Tobacco’s and BMSR’s previous releases, but it’s still a great addition to their catalog.

Soft New Magic Dream by Black Moth Super Rainbow

Badvril- “In Heaven”

The debut album from SF’s Badvril. Dreamy pop music with Tessa Piccolo, a friend and fellow yo-yoer, on drums.

In Heaven by BADVRIL

Natural Information Society and Bitchin Bajas- “Totality”

In full disclosure, I first heard Natural Information Society when doing a search for new music by Information Society. Two totally different bands, but I’m really digging NIS’s sound, so I’m glad to find them. The music is instrumental jazz with minimalist percussion and acoustic bass. It’s drone music at times and Steve Reich-y at others.

Chat Pile- “Live at Roadburn 2023”

A great collection of live tracks by Chat Pile.

Live at Roadburn 2023 by Chat Pile

The post recent music finds on Bandcamp appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 02, 2025 05:41 PM

Monoprinciples

Reverse advice column #1

Trying something new!

In most advice columns one person dispenses advice to many. I believe that collective wisdom emerges when we share our individual experiences. In the Reverse Advice Column I pose a question to Microprinciples readers. In the next issue, I’ll share your insights.


Previous question

What’s one small habit that has had outsized impact on your life?

A Sound of Thunder is the classic sci-fi story where a time-travel company sends you back in time to hunt dinosaurs. You know what happens next. You accidentally step on a butterfly in the Jurassic era, yadda, yadda, yadda, Germany wins World War II.

We intuitively understand that small changes in the past can lead to an unimaginably different present, so why do we resist the idea that small changes today could lead to an unimaginable future?

For me, the small habit that changed my life is journalling. Starting my day with paper and pen (not a screen) does something to my brain I can’t explain. A day without journalling is like a day without brushing my teeth; I feel unsettled. In the 10 years since I started, my daily writing has let me perceive the world in new ways.

Your insights

🧇 Waffle Wednesdays. We share our “waffles” (life updates, highs and lows) in a short video. It's unpolished and unapologetic. (I once propped my phone in my fridge to capture my video update.) The point is to stay connected despite busy lives and to avoid constantly apologizing for not speaking sooner.–JMDLP

🧗🏻‍♂️ More stairs. I can linearly correlate my overall energy, health, and positive disposition to those years when I had to climb a lot of stairs. Walking, exercise, eating right, not drinking too much are all great additions for wellness, but more stairs always seems to be the heavy-hitter.–T. Branscombe

🛏️ Making my bed. People in recovery regularly espouse making their bed as one of the habits that changes their life. The idea is that one builds self-esteem by doing esteemable acts. It’s the same as brushing your teeth, flossing, or showering. By taking care of yourself, you show yourself you matter.–Anonymouse 🐁

🗓️ I buy wall calendars… but instead of using them as planners, I fill them with small highlights of the previous day. It’s a way for me to see how I have been spending my day, how I feel about how I spend my time, and what I want to do the next day. Makes me feel grounded in many ways.–Anonymouse 🐁


This week’s question

When has putting something down allowed you to pick up something better?

Simply hit reply to answer. Your note can be as long or as short as you like. Even one sentence! Don’t overthink it or backspace yourself. Just make it edible. Responses may be edited for clarity or length. Unless you instruct me otherwise, I’ll sign you as “anonymouse.”

P.S. A huge thank you to the pilot group of readers for your answers and encouragement—and for helping me prevent this debacle. I appreciate you!

by V Sri at May 02, 2025 03:41 PM

April 30, 2025

Monoprinciples

No growth without demolition

“The most useful piece of learning for the uses of life is to unlearn what is untrue.”
–Antisthenes

Babies don’t struggle with walking because they’re stupid. They struggle because learning requires rewiring neural pathways in real-time—like digging trenches for water while the river is flowing—it’s tough. You might think of learning as accumulation: adding knowledge, picking up skills, gaining experiences. That’s only half the story.

Learning also requires unlearning. There is no growth without demolition.

Ideas you once fought to understand must be abandoned. Your hard-earned mountain peaks are now basecamps for another climb. Each version of yourself requires the death of the previous one. Learning isn’t only about baby’s first steps; it’s putting grandpa on an ice floe and casting him off to sea.

You are building sandcastles, over and over. The structures themselves matter less than the architect you become. You are the river and the stone, simultaneously carving and being carved.

With every twist of the prism, meaning shifts in new light. You may no longer “know” what you once knew, because what can be known changes as you move through time. The truth is like a mushroom1. This cycle cannot be avoided because existence itself is endless change.

Transformation, not accumulation. Death, not addition. That’s the price.

1

“We’re Barely Here,” Oregano Shirt Podcast, 2019.

by V Sri at April 30, 2025 03:25 PM

April 28, 2025

Certainly Strange

Wiz-War!

The game of magical mayhem! We were playing board games (Dune, Wiz-War, Cosmic Encounter, etc etc) a LOT for a while there. It petered out during the pandemic and we never really got back into it. Recently, though, I played a game of Wiz-War and I remembered how much I love that game. We really … Continue reading "Wiz-War!"

by Steen at April 28, 2025 05:58 AM

April 27, 2025

I before E except Gleitzman

April 25, 2025

Doctor Popular

Mastodon Zine Rough Draft

Here’s a Mastodon-themed zine that I’ve been working on for a while. I started this a year ago, but put it on pause because I didn’t think it was getting to where I’d like it to be. I decided to bring this project back out and make some tweaks to it before sharing the draft here publicly, with the hope of getting feedback and collaborating on it with other folks.

This draft (and the final zine) are CC-BY licensed. This is a single page zine that can be printed and folded at home using the directions I shared in this blog post https://docpop.org/zine

Mastodon Zine v2 (April 24th, 2025):

Here is v2 of the Mastodon zine. Based on feedback from v1 of the zine, I switched up the font. The new font uses an open-source font called Cascadia Mono (available here). I shortened a few sentences and added a drawing of a DeLorean.

I think this zine should either be about why Mastodon (and the fediverse) is worth exploring OR it should be about how to join Mastodon, but I don’t think it’s capable of doing both. So for v3 I’m thinking about removing the last 3 pages about how to join Mastodon and reduce that to a link and QR code. Maybe a link to my “How To Get Started With Mastodon” post.

Below is the version you can print and fold at home (using the zine making instructions here):

Version 2 of the Doc Pop's Mastodon guide. This is an 8 page guide, all laid out on one single sheet of paper. People can print this guide out and then fold it into a little booklet

or the zine can be read online here:

MASTODON, THE FEDIVERSE,
AND EVERYTHING:
A guide to better social media It's time for change.
Mastodon gives power back to its users.
It's ad-free, algorithm-free, and interoperable.
Connect with diverse communities and
rediscover the joy of social media, thanks to the magic of the fediverse. The Fediverse!
Imagine interacting with a YouTube video from your Instagram account... or following a Twitter user from your Facebook page.
This is the promise of
the fediverse.
The fediverse is an ecosystem of websites and services that interact with each other through an open
protocol.
No single company owns
or controls the
fediverse. The fediverse is more than Mastodon
The fediverse is home to many other apps like Pixelfed, WordPress, Flipboard,
Lemmy, Peertube,
and Threads. This means you can
stay connected to all of your friends from within your Mastodon feed without signing up for other services. The Benefits of
Mastodon
• Control Your Data:
Mastodon does not collect or sell your data to advertisers or third parties.
• Own Your Followers:
If you want to change servers, you can take your followers with you .
• No Algorithms:
You control what you see and how you see it in your feed.
• Community Focused:
User privacy and safety are top priorities in the Mastodon community. How to Join:
Step 1: Pick an Instance An Step 3: Create Your Profile Use the Edit Profile button to add a profile picture, bio, and relevant links. The more info you add here, the easier it is to connect with
new and old friends.
Step 4: Follow and Engage Making new friends can be intimidating. The best advice is to dive into the deep end and try following and interacting as much as possible. You can find people with similar
interests by searching for keywords in the search bar or clicking on hashtags,
e. g., #StarTrek. You can follow hashtags as well as people! Engage!
The more you put into Mastodon, the more you get out of it. Find new friends, follow interesting hashtags, and get engaged by Liking, commenting, or

The post Mastodon Zine Rough Draft appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at April 25, 2025 03:12 AM

April 23, 2025

Monoprinciples

Mistakes are more than acceptable

“No mud, no lotus.”
–Thich Nhat Hanh

At my last job, a higher-up confidently declared in a team meeting that “mistakes are unacceptable.” Poppycock. Mistakes are more than acceptable.

When you make mistakes taboo, you associate them with shame. Shame feels bad, so you adapt by avoiding the risk of doing and collaborating. It’s simple math: you make fewer mistakes when you take fewer actions. (But You gotta do something.)

Mistakes are acceptable because they are inevitable. When you reject the inevitable, you’re in resistance to reality itself. So where are you living then? In a self-constructed illusion, disconnected from the world as it actually exists. Like, for example, middle management at a SaaS company.

This is why you spend time with children (little humans), because they produce mistakes with glee. Our children show you how to learn without shame. This is also why you spend time with elders, because they’ve earned wisdom from a foreign land you call the past. (Don't be so hard on the past.) Our ancestors show you that the journey to now is paved with mistakes.

Errors are the tax you pay for growth—expensive, necessary, unavoidable. The moment you stop making mistakes is the moment you stop becoming.

Thanks for reading Microprinciples.

Share

by V Sri at April 23, 2025 03:32 PM

April 21, 2025

Doctor Popular

#SidewalkFriends: Doc Pop Starter Kit

I like to keep an eye out for cool shapes during my walks and use them as inspiration for my #SidewalkFriends drawings. It’s like my version of hunting for Pokémon.

I’ve seen a lot of folks sharing #StarterPack images lately, so I thought I’d put my own spin on it by using one of my Sidewalk Friends sketches as the starting point. File under: #StarterPackNoAI

Timelapse video showing art being made. It starts with the final image, a drawing of a white guy with blonde hair and glasses, in a A photo of a metal pole sticking up from the sidewalk. There is a section of green paint on the pole that isn't very interesting other than the shape of the paint, which was used as inspiration for the Sidewalk Friends sketch.

I've seen a lot of folks sharing images lately, so I thought I'd put my own spin on it by using one of my sketches as the starting point.

— Doctor M. Popular (@docpop) 2025-04-16T01:19:18.102Z

The post #SidewalkFriends: Doc Pop Starter Kit appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at April 21, 2025 02:24 AM

Certainly Strange

Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence’s Easter in Dolores Park 2025

The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence put on another Hunky Jesus competition in Dolores Park for 2025. This year’s winning Jesus was “Cowboy Carter Jesus,” who rode in astride a giant disco bison.

by Steen at April 21, 2025 02:11 AM

April 20, 2025

I before E except Gleitzman

April 16, 2025

Monoprinciples

You gotta do something

“There is a point where in the mystery of existence contradictions meet;
where movement is not all movement and stillness is not all stillness.”
–Rabindranath Tagore

In moments of stillness, you may glimpse a sacred feeling: enough. A whispered invitation to remain still, to embrace the dissolution of your body and consciousness, to surrender all earthly pursuits and join the cosmos. These moments are potent reminders of being and nothingness. But you are not dead yet.

Life is motion. The universe swims toward disorder yet, somehow you find (a mote of) order against the current. So, though it pains me to say this, you gotta do something.

Yes, all making and doing is fundamentally pointless in cosmic terms. But your days are numbered, so might as well get cracking. You can't do everything; so orient toward heartbreak and choose. You have infinite freedom, and yet, you do (in fact) have to know what you want.

It’s all a real kick in the pants.

And it’s not exactly easy. Doing, making, writing, water-skiing, whatever: it all involves risk—physical pain, rejection, failure. But these aren’t obstacles to a meaningful life; this is the substance of it.

All your attempts are essays—the word itself means "to try"—that add up to the monograph that is you. And the ripples of your actions extend beyond your pages, inspiring others to do, and to make, to strap on their own skis, and so on, and so on.

Between periods of chaotic creation, you return to stillness. Inspiration requires expiration, breathing out to make room for new breath. And this produces another revelation. That sometimes you gotta do nothing, because you are enough.

Microprinciples are croutons formed in the soup of stillness. Thanks for reading.

by V Sri at April 16, 2025 03:31 PM

April 14, 2025

Doctor Popular

My Eldar Army

Back when I lived in Minneapolis (2001–2005), I managed a toy store in the Mall of America called Air Traffic Kites and Games. We carried yo-yos, juggling equipment, board games, and kites—but we also had a massive section dedicated to Warhammer figures. Naturally, I was expected to be familiar with the game, so I put some time into building my own 40k army. I focused on the Eldar and the Dark Eldar.

I didn’t stick with the hobby for too long, but I thought it’d be fun to share some photos of my armies. Eventually, I sold them off on Craigslist for a hundred bucks or so.

A small group of 10 Dark Eldar figures. They have purple armor and spikey knives attached to their suits and weapons. They have a chaotic dangerous look to them. A Wraithlord figure from Warhammer 40k. It is a tall white robot, with a big green head. My Dark Eldar army, about 6 units shown. They aren't very details, but there is fake grass added to the bases. A photo of my Eldar army surrounding a corpse of a Dark Eldar warrior. The Eldar are painted with white armor and green highlights. The Dark Eldar is painted with purple armor and fake blood pooling around it. A Falcon Gravtank unit from Warhammer 40k. The top section is painted with a green layer, and a black layer on top that cracks and separates, exposing the green underneat. A group of Eldar figures (in white armor with green highlights) surrounding a Dark Eldar warrior laying on the ground. The Dark Eldar is cut into pieces with fake blood pooling around it.

The post My Eldar Army appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at April 14, 2025 08:41 PM

Certainly Strange

Black Shard

I went looking for recent video game releases and this led me to Black Shard, which has been a great experience so far. It’s stunning, moving, and compelling – with an interesting mystery at the heart of it all. I got it just because it looked arty and interesting and I wanted to find a … Continue reading "Black Shard"

by Steen at April 14, 2025 08:05 AM

I before E except Gleitzman

April 09, 2025

Monoprinciples

Think slow to move fast

“Nature does not hurry, yet everything is accomplished.”
Lao Tzu

The faster you move, the less you can see. The less you see, the more stays unknown. The more that's unknown, the more you're in fear. The more you're in fear, the less you can do to help people. And you gotta do something.

Expedient action requires deliberate thought. When you think slowly, you can move more quickly.

You're not always resourced to respond. You can't solve every problem the moment you discover it. You can't internalize every concept the moment you hear it. Like a sliding puzzle, you need space in your mind to move things around.

Paradoxically, some things need time to ripen. It may have to get worse before it gets better. Let time bring solidity to the form. Then can you heft the problem with both hands.

But once you do slow down, the payoff is counterintuitive: you move faster in the long run. You skip the false starts. You avoid the rework. You sidestep the traps. You build solutions that solve the real problem, instead of making bandaids that collapse under pressure.

Moving slowly isn't passive—it's strategic patience. The world wants you dizzy with urgency. But urgency without direction is just panic in business casual. Slow your mind first. The rest will follow, and faster than you'd think.

Microprinciples is written very slowly.

by V Sri at April 09, 2025 03:25 PM

April 07, 2025

Certainly Strange

Down to Clown

Painting the clown elves now I think it might have been the greenish black I used to paint the base coat for the Drukhari’s armor, but edge highlighting was hell for those guys, nothing would stick at all seemingly. I might re-evaluate in the future, but so far this is my running list of things … Continue reading "Down to Clown"

by Steen at April 07, 2025 02:38 AM

April 06, 2025

Vivek Sri

Big Ears 2025

Thursday, March 27 to Sunday, March 30, 2025.

Shows

Day 1

  • Tigran Hamasyan, Tennessee Theatre
  • Charles Lloyd: Homage to Zakir Hussain, Tennessee Theatre

Day 2

  • Philip Glass Ensemble: Music in Twelve Parts (1–6), Tennessee Theatre
  • Sun Ra and Yo La Tengo, Knoxville Civic Auditorium
  • Still House Plants, The Standard

Day 3

  • Philip Glass Ensemble: Music in Twelve Parts (7–12), Tennessee Theatre
  • James McVinnie & Eliza McCarthy, 133 Years of Reverb, St. John’s Cathedral
  • Sylvie Courvoisier: Chimaera, Bijou Theatre
  • Lara Somogyi, First Presbyterian Sanctuary
  • Dakhabrakha, Tennessee Theatre
  • Don Was (DJ set), Blue Note Lounge
  • Clipping, Jackson Terminal
  • Water Damage, The Standard

Day 4

  • Laraaji, St. John’s Cathedral
  • Kite Symphony, UT Downtown Gallery
  • Mùm, Bijou Theatre

Dispatches

The typical punishment for flying between two mid-tier American airports is a layover in a monstrous one. To avoid this we flew direct to Nashville. Our AirBNB is Dolly Parton and Johnny Cash themed. There are 5 guitars on the wall, but no Wi-Fi. We stress-test our livers at Bar Sovereign, Skull’s Rainbow Room, and The Patterson House. The next day we will drive three hours to Knoxville, with a stop in between for hot chicken.

Did you know McGhie Tyson airport is named for a middling-Knoxville man of little importance?

Ladies described him as “charming,” but he wasn’t necessarily the sort of guy you’d think of as a tragic hero. You’ve probably met him yourself: the West Knoxville boy who goes to the Ivy League college and comes home to work for his dad’s company. The handsome unmarried playboy who, even in his late 20s, still lives with his parents. The rich, idle kid who spends most of his free time hanging around Cherokee Country Club playing golf.

There’s a lesson in here somewhere.

I’m staying, for the fourth time, at the Hilton Embassy Suites on S. Gay street. I’ve never frequented any single hotel location more than this, and none has availed themselves of so much of my money. For my loyalty, I have earned at least a dozen Hilton Honors points.

First show: Tigran Hamasyan at the Tennessee Theatre. Armenian folk, jazz piano, progressive rock, and metal. He’s playing from his album The Bird of A Thousand Voices.

I was stoked to see the master Ustad Zakir Hussain, but he died in December. As someone who pretends to play tabla, I felt obligated to make the pilgrimage to his tribute concert. Ganavya sings along with Hussain’s longtime collaborators.

My obsession with Philip Glass started in high school when our percussion ensemble started dosing on Steve Reich, John Cage, and other aleatory drugs. Michael Reisman and the Philip Glass Ensemble performed the entirety of Music in Twelve Parts; an intricate sonic scarf that’s so dense I had to close my eyes to take it all in. The ensemble plays continuously, dividing the three hour piece over two days. I start Friday and Saturday with Glass at the Tennessee Theatre and I feel like I have 100 new synapses. Magnificent.

Sun Ra and Yo La Tengo sharing a stage is surprisingly underwhelming. They alternated songs and never quite found a groove together. Yo La Tengo awkwardly tensed around the ‘Arkestra’ like a doofus trying to infiltrate a conversation at a party. Messy. We surmised that the two bands didn’t really know each other before this show. Turns out they collaborate all the time. What the fuck.

Still House Plants is great. Three young talents in complete vibratory alignment. Jazzy drums, dry guitar, goth-y vocals. Can’t wait to see them when they add some protein to this club sandwich.

133 Years of Reverb turns out to be a sound bath administered by two very over-qualified healers. I saw James McVinnie in this same church a few years ago, but this year he was ordered, with Eliza McCarthy, to dutifully deliver hours-long whole note chords for most of the day.

Alabaster Deplume. I didn’t see him at all this year. Everyone else saw him multiple times. Huh.

Dakhabrakha. My fifth(?) time seeing this band. The first time was at Big Ears in 2017, when they rocked The Standard and it was the highlight of my trip. Once again, they did not disappoint. I get emotional when I think of how hard they are working to free their nation from tyranny. They are not just musicians, they are activists, and every show is a protest. They end the performance by auctioning off one of Marko’s paintings. I don’t even let myself consider bidding: it goes for $3000.

Clipping. Daveed Diggs can rap. Who knew?

Don Was DJ set. The record producer is spinning tracks he had a hand in producing from a 40 year long career. I only knew that he produced Love Shack by the B-52s; turns out he’s a legend.

Peter Peppercorn up to his old bullshit:

Within the quiet, cascading corners of Pittsburgh lies a community – nothing short of one large family – that spans zip codes, histories, occupations, and generations, always tumbling inwardly into itself, propped up by steadfast pillars of conviction toward spiritual and emotional mutual aid. The kind of earnest community scaffolding that gets bandied about, wielded as conjecture, particularly in an age of increasing fracture through digital sublimation, is alive and quite well within the universe surrounding Merce Lemon.

Water Damage. Maximum repetition, minimal variation. I guess I wasn’t in the mood, which is rich coming from someone who titrated three hours of Philip Glass that same weekend.

Laraaji. I know him from Brian Eno’s Ambient album, so I didn’t know what to expect. He played soaring, improvisational piano while sing-speaking a paean on non-duality and consciousness to a packed house at St. John’s. Upon walking out, someone described the performance like “getting a massage.” That sounds right.

Mùm is the last show of the festival for us. Ryan says there’s “not a bad seat” at the Bijou, except perhaps for the folks sitting next to the man generating scandalous AI images on his phone while waiting for the show to start. Mum is excellent, but they seemed annoyed with the tech. Later we will beside them at a bar, and Gabe will help one of the members buy a new Macbook Pro.


The previous Big Ears

by Big Ears 2025 at April 06, 2025 07:00 AM

April 05, 2025

I Like Turtles

Spring break road trips!

/2025/04/05/spring-break-road-trips.html

April 05, 2025 07:00 AM

April 04, 2025

I before E except Gleitzman

Yet Another Age Verification Pop-up for Squarespace

I wanted to add an Age Gate / Age Verification pop-up for Squarespace. The top search engine result had some code, but it A) didn’t work B) didn’t look very good and C) didn’t have any functionality for tracking cookies. Instead, use this code:

First, put this into the injected code in the Header

<!– Age Verification Pop-up HTML –> <div id=“age-verification-popup”> <div class=“popup-content”> <h2>ARE YOU 21+?</h2> <div class=“image-circle-container” style=“margin-bottom: 24px;”> <img src=“https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/6788837817ec6330feff09fe/a0416e38-e21f-4f14-88b3-0a8c8589e435/lambi_lamb_black.png” alt=“LAMBI” class=“centered-image” fetchpriority=“high” loading=“eager” decoding=“async” data-loader=“raw”> </div> <div class=“button-container”> <button id=“verify-button-yes”>YES</button> <button id=“verify-button-no”>NO</button> </div> <p class=“disclaimer”> You must be of legal drinking age in<br> your respective country for entry.<br><br> We encourage drinking responsibly! </p> </div> </div>

Next, inject this CSS:

/* Style for Age Verification Pop-up */ #age-verification-popup { display: none; /* Initially hidden, JS will show it if needed */ position: fixed; top: 0; left: 0; width: 100%; height: 100%; background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.8); /* Semi-transparent black overlay */ z-index: 9999; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; /* Or choose a font that matches */ } .popup-content { position: absolute; top: 50%; left: 50%; transform: translate(-50%, -50%); background-color: #fff; /* White background */ padding: 40px 30px; /* Adjust padding as needed */ text-align: center; border: 1px solid #ccc; /* Optional: adds a light border */ min-width: 300px; /* Minimum width */ box-shadow: 0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.1); /* Optional subtle shadow */ } /* Optional logo styling */ /* .popup-logo { max-width: 80px; margin-bottom: 20px; } */ .popup-content h2 { font-size: 1.2em; /* Adjust size as needed */ margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 25px; font-weight: bold; line-height: 1.4; color: #000; /* Black text */ } .button-container { margin-bottom: 25px; } #verify-button-yes, #verify-button-no { background-color: #000; /* Black background */ color: #fff; /* White text */ padding: 12px 30px; /* Adjust padding */ border: none; cursor: pointer; font-size: 1em; font-weight: bold; margin: 0 5px; /* Space between buttons */ min-width: 80px; /* Minimum width for buttons */ transition: background-color 0.2s ease; /* Smooth hover effect */ } #verify-button-yes:hover, #verify-button-no:hover { background-color: #333; /* Slightly lighter black on hover */ } .popup-content .disclaimer { font-size: 0.9em; /* Smaller font size for disclaimer */ color: #555; /* Grey text */ line-height: 1.5; } .image-circle-container { width: 70px; /* Adjust size of the circle as needed */ height: 70px; /* Must be the same as width for a perfect circle */ background-color: transparent; /* Black background */ border-radius: 50%; /* This makes the div circular */ display: flex; /* Enables flexbox for easy centering */ justify-content: center; /* Centers content (image) horizontally */ align-items: center; /* Centers content (image) vertically */ overflow: hidden; /* Ensures image doesn’t spill outside the circle if it’s too big */ margin-left: auto; /* Centers the circle container itself horizontally */ margin-right: auto; /* Centers the circle container itself horizontally */ } .centered-image { display: block; /* Removes extra space below the image */ height: 50px; /* Your desired image height */ width: auto; /* Let width adjust automatically to maintain aspect ratio */ max-width: 90%; /* Optional: Prevents image from touching the circle edge */ max-height: 90%;/* Optional: Prevents image from touching the circle edge */ }

Finally, inject this code into the footer

<script> // JavaScript for Age Verification Pop-up with Cookies document.addEventListener(“DOMContentLoaded”, function () { const popup = document.getElementById(“age-verification-popup”); const verifyButtonYes = document.getElementById(“verify-button-yes”); const verifyButtonNo = document.getElementById(“verify-button-no”); const cookieName = “ageVerified”; // Name of our cookie // Function to set a cookie function setCookie(name, value, days) { let expires = “”; if (days) { const date = new Date(); date.setTime(date.getTime() + (days * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000)); expires = “; expires=” + date.toUTCString(); } // Add SameSite=Lax and Secure attributes for better security, especially if using HTTPS // For local testing (http), you might omit ‘Secure’ // document.cookie = name + “=” + (value || “”) + expires + “; path=/; SameSite=Lax; Secure”; document.cookie = name + “=” + (value || “”) + expires + “; path=/; SameSite=Lax”; // Use this line if not using HTTPS for testing } // Function to get a cookie function getCookie(name) { const nameEQ = name + “=”; const ca = document.cookie.split(’;’); for(let i = 0; i < ca.length; i++) { let c = ca[i]; while (c.charAt(0) === ’ ’) c = c.substring(1, c.length); if (c.indexOf(nameEQ) === 0) return c.substring(nameEQ.length, c.length); } return null; } // Check if the age verification cookie exists const isVerified = getCookie(cookieName); if (!isVerified) { // If the cookie doesn’t exist, show the pop-up if (popup) { popup.style.display = “block”; } } else { // If the cookie exists, keep the pop-up hidden (it’s hidden by default CSS) console.log(“Age already verified.”); } // Event listener for the “YES” button if (verifyButtonYes) { verifyButtonYes.addEventListener(“click”, function () { // Set a cookie to remember verification for 365 days setCookie(cookieName, “yes”, 365); // Hide the pop-up if (popup) { popup.style.display = “none”; } }); } // Event listener for the “NO” button if (verifyButtonNo) { verifyButtonNo.addEventListener(“click”, function () { // Redirect the user to the specified URL when they click “NO” window.location.href = “https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s50vvwTystA”; }); } }); </script>

Enjoy!

April 04, 2025 08:50 PM

April 01, 2025

Doctor Popular

The Cartoonist Conspiracy of San Francisco

Audio version of this post, read by the author

After a long hiatus, I’m hosting a Cartoonist Conspiracy SF meet up next Tuesday in the Mission District.

Cartoonist Conspiracy SF
7-9pm on Tuesday April 8th
Finjan Qahwa coffee shop (3188 Mission St)
All ages, no cover fee (but please buy a drink or pastry)

What’s a Jam Comic?

A comic jam is a creative experiment where multiple artists collaborate to make a comic together. Usually an artist draws a single panel on a sheet of paper, then hands the paper to someone else who then creates the next panel. There’s no script, and each artist can take the comic in whatever direction they want.

To keep the book a little more coherent, I usually like to number the blank pages before the event begins. This means when an artist is drawing the last panel on a page, they need to find the next page and make sure their panel connects the two pages together. So if I’m drawing the last panel on page 5, I need to look at the first panel on page 6 and find a way for my panel to connect the story from page 5 to page 6.

That’s how jam comics are made!

An example of a jam comic. It's black and white art depicting a robot story. Each panel is clearly drawn by a different artist, but it tells a coherent story. A comic book page consisting of 4 panels. Each panel is written and drawn by a different artist, but it all tells one linear story. The first panel was drawn by a computerized plotter at the Maker Faire, but it was turned into a panel for the comic. All the other panels are hand drawn.

What is The Cartoonist Conspiracy?

The Cartoonist Conspiracy is a meetup for cartoonists to work on jam comics together. Steven Stwalley started the original International Cartoonist Conspiracy in Minneapolis in 2002. I was a regular attendee back in the day, so when I moved to San Francisco in 2005, I knew I had to start a chapter here too.

A dozen artists sitting in a cafe. They are drawing comics and interacting with each other. It's a very positive vibe. Cartoonist Conspiracy jam at Muddy Waters in 2007. A flier for the SF Cartoonist Conspiracy from 2007. It shows drawings of robots (drawn by Mike Hales) and text that says 2007 flier for SFCC by Mike Hales.

The San Francisco Cartoonist Conspiracy ran from 2006 to 2011 (or so). I started the group and organized the meetings for the first three or four years, but I couldn’t keep up with it on a monthly basis, so other folks took the reins and kept it going longer. Shout out particularly to Brian Kolm and Romy Ilano for keeping the jams going and uploading the comics to the blog and on social media.

Back From The Dead?

There’s no shortage of awesome events for artists in San Francisco. I’ve mentioned the Community Table events at The Drawing Room before, but there are many other great events for artists to choose from. That said, I still think there’s room for a collaborative, storytelling-focused meetup like SFCC. It’s a lot more collaborative than a still life meet-up, and it’s fun to work on sequential storytelling.

There’s also this rad new coffee shop in the Mission called Finjan Qahwa which seems like a perfect fit for a meet-up like this. It’s all ages, free to get in (but please buy a coffee or pastry), well lit, and open late. It really reminds me of the Muddy Waters or the other shops the SFCC got it’s start in.

So we’ll try this meetup on April 8th, and if I have fun, I might do it again. I know that I can’t organize it on my own, so I’m really hoping that other folks can help with organizing in some way (scanning comics, posting on social, etc). But I’m taking it slow for now and just seeing how this one goes.

I have such fond memories from our SFCC meetups and met many of my closest SF friends through these jams. I know there are still a lot of young artists in the city and I hope that some of them can find the same joy from the SFCC that we did back in the day.

1744164000

  days

  hours  minutes  seconds

until

SF Cartoonist Conspiracy at Finjan Qahwa

The post The Cartoonist Conspiracy of San Francisco appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at April 01, 2025 04:47 PM

March 30, 2025

Doctor Popular

Skin the Gerbil cocktail at PNWR

The Pacific Northwest Regional Yo-Yo Contest happened this week up in Portland. I couldn’t make it this year, but I heard good things. At one of the PNWR parties, there were some cocktails inspired by classic yo-yo tricks. This included a bourbon and ginger beer drink called “Skin the Gerbal”, named after a trick I created called “Skin The Gerbil”. It looks tasty!

A list of cocktails on a bar counter. The list says

Shout out to the PNWR crew for hosting the event and for honoring one of my tricks like that. I hope I can attend next year and try one of these in person.

The post Skin the Gerbil cocktail at PNWR appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at March 30, 2025 11:49 PM

March 29, 2025

I before E except Gleitzman

March 27, 2025

Doctor Popular

How to Make a Zine or Mini-Comic

I’ve shared a fun new video about how to make fold your own zine or mini-comic from a single sheet of paper. You can watch the video on Youtube or embedded below. You can download my “How to Make A Mini-Comic” comic for free on docpop.org/zine

Thanks to Silver Sprocket for letting me shoot footage in their San Francisco storefront.

The post How to Make a Zine or Mini-Comic appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at March 27, 2025 09:49 PM

March 25, 2025

I Like Turtles

Tahoe

/2025/03/25/tahoe.html

March 25, 2025 07:00 AM

March 24, 2025

I before E except Gleitzman

March 19, 2025

Monoprinciples

Make a mess, keep it tidy

What makes Microprinciples different—and potentially annoying to those seeking the capital-T Truth—is the heterogeneity of their approach. Sometimes they Dad you headlong into a direction (Approach the unsaid corners, Do the math). Sometimes they are your Mom sitting shotgun, gasping for the brakes (Be careful what you get good at, Move as slow as possible). And this observation is a principle unto itself.

You need to make a mess.

Ask any God, everything about creation is messy. First you must create the universe (a total slog), cool a tidal wave of energy into matter, bake a clump of matter into life. It’s basic physics. An eon to make a cell, another for a spine, and two shakes for a bipedal ape to unearth, crush, mix, manufacture, and conjure the lot into the system of language, glass, and electrons upon which you read this note. Nature is all mess. Nature is the impossible. Nature is chaos. No bad ideas. The waste is what works. If you don’t believe me, go watch a mammalian birth or stick a microscope in your garden. To make is to make a mess.

You have to keep it tidy.

Spare the rod, spoil the world. Ideas must sorted, darlings slain. You must unhoard your best thoughts, murder your first born ideas to make room for new ones. Sort, section, smize. Choose fewer, better things. Look at your options and eliminate the extremes. Find the middle. Find the singular ideas, identify the quintessence, and leave out the rest. If you don’t do it, nature will through a process called death. Every fall the leaves step off the ledge and make room for a new season of mess.

The bottle in your bathroom says lather, then rinse, then repeat. It leaves out the part where you must also go live a life worthy of examination and perish from this Earth. All existence is an oscillation between the chaos of suds and the swirl of same down the drain.

Only priests and mathematicians believe in a Theory of Everything. Your author hoards Theories of Everything. Notes on a string pinned between tidy and messy, order and chaos, atoms and the void.

by V Sri at March 19, 2025 06:24 PM

March 18, 2025

I Like Turtles

Pupy Sayfse the Day

/2025/03/18/pupy-sayfse-the-day.html

March 18, 2025 07:00 AM

March 12, 2025

Monoprinciples

You must learn to discern

“It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.”
–Aristotle

Wisdom isn’t a collection, it’s a chemical reaction. It’s not adding books to a shelf; it’s adding ingredients to a soup that’s been simmering your whole life. But you most definitely have a bias, so you automatically reject anything that contradicts your cauldron. This is a weakness. To think freely, you must learn to discern.

Discernment is the willingness to taste each ingredient—even your hated cilantro—before rejecting it from the soup. To ask “what is this?” before “what do I think about this?” You’ll still be permitted to judge, don’t worry darling. You are merely splitting your observation and judgement into two distinct actions.

You might say, “some ideas/people/ingredients (like cilantro) are Obviously Harmful” and require no consideration. Be careful. The category of Obviously Harmful once included mixed marriages, women’s suffrage, and even books. In the future, Obviously Harmful might everything you believe today. Don’t leave out the impossible.

When you fuse observation with evaluation, you commit the fallacy of prejudice. I see it as more of a weakness than a crime, because one who is quick to judge is easy to control. You can brought to fury by exposure to ideas. You bristle at nuance. You become unable to take a joke. And you can become defined by what you are not.

Subscribe now

There’s value in thoughtful opposition, sure, but when you declare yourself “never Democrat” or “never Republican,” you are abdicating a kind of responsibility. Your opposition isn’t a stance but a blindfold. When you say, “I’ll never trust an artist who did something wrong,” you close yourself to most humans, and all who lived before you. Don’t be so hard on the past. You too have hurt someone else.

The world is more than just you. Sip before you swig. Take what serves you, leave what doesn’t. Let others take what serves them. Observe. Then judge. Your mind grows stronger not by what it accepts, but by what it learns to understand.

by V Sri at March 12, 2025 04:53 PM

March 11, 2025

I Like Turtles

Person of the week: Leonard

/2025/03/11/person-of-the-week-leonard.html

March 11, 2025 07:00 AM

March 07, 2025

Doctor Popular

Doc Pop’s Guide to Enshittification

I had a blast making this video about enshittification for WordPress.com. It’s a subject my friends are often asking about, so now I can share this explainer video with them. The video is available on Instagram and TikTok if you’d like to drop a ❤ or reshare.

As I mention in this video, enshittification is when a product starts off great but gets worse over time because a company values profits over it’s users. This can include things like paying creators less, increasing adds, or raising prices for the same service. The term was coined by Cory Doctorow in 2022. In the post, Cory says that companies can get away with enshittifying their products because they know it’s hard for users to switch after they’ve started using a service:

When switching costs are high, services can be changed in ways that you dislike without losing your business. The higher the switching costs, the more a company can abuse you, because it knows that as bad as they’ve made things for you, you’d have to endure worse if you left. – Cory Doctorow

As long as users lack power, companies can get away with this, which is why choosing tools like Mastodon, email newsletters, or building our own websites are the best ways we have to avoid the rot economy.

Platforms enshittify. Protocols deshittify.

Watch my Fediverse Files videos to learn more about how we can take back control of the web.

The post Doc Pop’s Guide to Enshittification appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at March 07, 2025 09:43 PM

March 06, 2025

I Like Turtles

Spring cleaning

/2025/03/06/spring-cleaning.html

March 06, 2025 08:00 AM