Weekly Assemblage for 2024 Week 28
Viewing, Listening, and Reading
The Black Hole
Although I’ve had a 7” read along book of this Disney movie since I was a child, this was the first time I can ever remember watching it. My wife couldn’t remember ever even hearing of the film before!
It’s an odd combination of German Expressionist cinematography and set design, vague “haunted castle” / foreboding “sinister mansion” / doomed “disaster ship” vibes, late 1970s Star Wars / post-_2001_ aesthetics, and an amazingly recognizable cast.
I wouldn’t exactly recommend it, especially as the film’s plot eventually just dissolves into “cinematic / psychedelic experience”. However, it is entertaining in a “wow, Disney in the 1970s was a different beast” way, as well as adding interesting differences between popular science fiction treatment of cyborgs and purely constructed automata.
Last Night
Ever since some close friends lived in Toronto while we lived in Rochester, we’ve been in the habit of vaguely celebrating Canada Day, usually with homemade poutine (or our easier to make nacho/poutine concoction) and some CanCon media.
This film was recommended as a “dark comedy”, but very little of it amounts to laughing types of humor. It’s wry and interesting, but more of a vague apocalyptic art house film about humans making meaning of their lives than an actual comedy.
I’m glad to have seen it—especially as a reminder of all the times I’ve gone to see little art films, mostly when living in Riverside and Rochester—but I doubt I’ll watch it again. Seeing Sandra Oh and David Cronenberg was also quite fun.
Office Space
We busted out a DVD/CD drive to watch this one, and I’m pleased to report that it mostly holds up to my memories of it.
Lightly-Annotated Linkapalooza
- A Year of Weeknotes by Thomas Rigby shares a really useful strategy for consistently writing weeknotes: start a draft at the beginning of the week, then add to it throughout the week!
- Microfeatures I Love in Blogs and Personal Websites by Daniel Fedorin mentions quite a few lovely attributes websites might have. Things like sidenotes, tables of content, linkable headings (what I know as “deep links”), and external link markers definitely make any site friendlier in my experience as well. Seeing this—probably courtesy of Thomas Rigby, but I’m not certain of that—made me start investigating how I might add external link markers and sidenotes to my own site. (In short: there are plugins for Jekyll that probably do it; I’m not sure they’ll work with GitHub; I’m generally wary of adding more plugins that I don’t understand; I might try something with Javascript?)
- Creating a dyslexia friendly workplace is a style guide from the British Dyslexia Association with very useful suggestions about formatting, layout, and writing style.
Kudos
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