NYC
AMC & AMC+ Present: The Vampire Lestat: One Night Only - LIVE
Lights Down. Volume Up. Fangs Out.
On the final stop of the band’s decadent North American tour, The Vampire Lestat transforms the Beacon Theatre into a cathedral of chaos. The night kicks off with the exclusive premiere screening of The Vampire Lestat—your first hit of the myth, the menace, and the music.
Then the one and only Lestat de Lioncourt hits the stage.
In full rock‑god form, Lestat unleashes a live musical performance soaked in swagger, spectacle, and immortal excess. This is part screening, part concert, part temptation—designed to shake the walls and leave the faithful wanting more.
One night. No restraint.
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This is one of those times that I'm sad I'm not an actual big-name influencer, because you just know some of those types will be flown out for this.
Fungi utilize ancient antimicrobial proteins to attack hosts and their microbiomes, plant researcher

( Behold the Mirror of Diana - Nemi )
( Where Popes and Roman Emperors spent their summer vacations )
( Tusculum: Where Cicero shared all the hot gossip with Atticus )
And then I visited Rome itself.
( The City. Its World. )
* Posted "Birdfeeding" in
* Commented on "Just One Thing" in
* Commented on "Check-In Post - April 29th 2026" in
The first is
The other one is
Finally, not a community BUT is Three Weeks For Dreamwidth-related, for my fellow Pokémon fans:

I fed the birds. I've seen a few sparrows and house finches.
I put out water for the birds.
EDIT 4/30/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.
EDIT 4/30/26 -- My live plants arrived from Select Seeds. :D I've put them outdoors with the others to get some sun.
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More about the LCC and the Arts: The LCC and the Arts II: the ‘Patronage of the Arts’ Scheme
If the government is serious in its stated aim of strengthening the social contract, it needs to act now to support and sustain the study and practice of history across all sectors of education, in communities and in public discourse. If we are to collectively ‘protect what matters’, we challenge educational leaders, policy makers and politicians to protect and defend history.
The Government's vision for archives
and
New strategic vision for archives highlights how BBC Written Archives Centre falls short:
{W]e profoundly regret the decision to stop responding to enquiries from members of the public. Also, it is entirely unsatisfactory that physical access for researchers via the Caversham reading room has been reduced from three to just two days each week.
Moreover, we disagree with WAC limiting use of its facilities to just ‘writers who have been commissioned to write a book or article; those undertaking research for a commercial project, [and] academics in higher education undertaking accredited research.’ The restrictions are detailed here, and are more tightly focussed than has been the case in the past.
Yeah, that's not sinister at all.... talk about controlling the narrative.
This is a fascinating piece on how people engage with 'dark tourism experiences': visits shaped less by exhibits, explanation panels and audio guides, and more by interactions with other visitors
This, however, is grim reading: What I Saw Inside the Kennedy Center: 'I spent 10 months working at the institution because I thought I could help protect it. What I observed there is far worse than the public knows'.
We have quite a regulatory situation developing around a drug called avacopan (Tavneos), which is given to patients with a particular type of vaculitis. That’s a complex disease area, and comes in several varieties, but a common theme in many of them is an autoimmune attack against various proteins found in neutrophils. The drug is an antagonist of the complement 5a receptor in the innate immune system, and it’s given along with other immunosuppressants.
It was developed recently by a company called ChemoCentryx, who ran a pivotal trial in 330 patients. Half got the standard of care plus a placebo and half got that standard plus the drug over 52 weeks, and the endpoints were remission at 26 and 52 weeks. Both endpoints were similar, and both showed a real benefit to the patients. Tavneos was approved by both the FDA and the European CHMP in 2022, and Amgen went on to purchase the entire company.
But earlier this year, the CHMP announced that they were starting an investigation based on reports of loss of data integrity in that trial. And the CDER at the FDA is proposing to have it withdrawn from the US market over the same issues. It’s very, very bad - here’s the FDA statement:
. . .new information that only became known to CDER more than three years after approval shows that unblinded study personnel manipulated the results of the pivotal clinical study so the drug looked effective when the original analysis did not support that conclusion. The applicant also did not disclose the original analysis to FDA, in violation of FDA regulations. CDER can no longer conclude that there is, or has ever been, a valid demonstration that TAVNEOS is effective for its approved use.
Ohhh boy. This is about as bad an accusation as you can make about a clinical trial, i.e. “The unblinded data were ugly, so we hocused the numbers until it looked like the drug worked”. I occasionally meet uninformed cynics who assume that this is how we always do things in the drug industry, but oh no, we don’t. We have an 85% failure rate in the clinic! Why would any clinical trial ever fail if we had constant recourse to bullshit like this?
For more details, this FDA document at the Federal Register is the place to go. This all came to light due to a lawsuit against the company for securities fraud, which included a consultant’s report about the avacopan/Tavneos trial process. That all came about because during the initial approval process ChemoCentryx made numerous public statement about how straightforward the trial was and how uneventful their interactions with the FDA had been, but in May of 2021 the FDA review committee hearing instead detailed a whole list of pointed questions the agency had had about the trial design and the interpretability of the results. That sent the stock down about 80%, and that will get you a shareholder lawsuit every time.
But as it turns out, the hapless shareholders don’t seem to have known the half of it. The consultant report introduced as evidence during the lawsuit claims that the initial analysis of the clinical trial showed it missing the primary endpoint, and that the company picked a number of cases for “readjudication”. Wouldntjaknowit, enough of these flipped over to positive during this reanalysis to cause the whole trial to meet its statistics. The report says that ChemoCentryx employees stated as much even before the reworking, calculating how many patient outcomes would need to be flipped. But none of this was disclosed in any way to the FDA, obviously, and yes, that is all flagrantly illegal if it’s what happened.
The FDA says that it requested a detailed account of the data handling for the trial, and that Amgen’s response a month later “confirmed the key factual allegations” above. But the company went on to claim that the data in the NDA are accurate and that the patient readjudications were appropriate. (As it turns out, the lawsuit was later dismissed without ever addressing these accusations, so it doesn’t have any bearing on this situation).
The case for the data changes being valid rests largely on patient glucocorticoid dosing or missing data, and I won’t get into the merits of that argument. But what seems beyond doubt is that ChemoCentryx made sure that the FDA never heard about it and made sure to submit only the freshly polished data set. Such readjudication-after-unblinding was, as you would imagine, absolutely not permitted under the study protocols. The FDA notes that one of the patients was initially marked down by ChemoCentryx as a non-responder due to missing data at week 26, but that same patient got helpfully moved to the “in remission” category after the unblinding. That’s precisely why you are not supposed to do that sort of thing.
There’s even more bad news: not only are there doubts about the efficacy, the safety profile is looking bad, too. The FDA has received numerous reports of liver toxicity, which was a concern even during approval (Tavneos already has a label warning to that effect). But since getting on the market there have been several fatalities, some of which involve the extremely-alarmingly-named “vanishing bile duct syndrome”, which I had never heard of until now. It’s just what it sounds like: the bile ducts through the liver tissue deteriorate and disappear, and that is clearly just as bad as you think it is. Most of those have been reported in Japan, for reasons unknown, but man, you don’t want that showing up anywhere. I feel pretty sure that a “Whatever happened to the bile ducts” finding during the trials would have shut things down right there. One has the impression that Amgen might have been better off if they'd never heard of this drug at all instead of being shackled to defending it.
The drug was approved with a requirement for a postmarketing study covering both safety and efficacy, but the FDA says that as of the most recent report, only 21 of the planned 300 patients had been enrolled. I’ve written about this problem before - too often, companies have an incentive to draaaaag their feet on these requirements and collect the data at glacial speed, and that may be just what we’re seeing here.
But as it stands, I would agree with the FDA’s contention that the trial results “are uninterpretable and cannot be salvaged with further analysis”. What’s more, it would seem that the company made materially false statements to the agency during the application process. This is all really, really unfortunate - for vasculitis patients most of all, but for the integrity of the whole clinical trial and drug approval process as well. We really don’t need this sort of thing right now - hell, we never have, but especially not now.
A lot of this first omnibus is Swamp Thing, covering stories I'd seen summarised elsewhere, and now I have read it, it is all so much darker and nastier than the summaries had conveyed to me. ( Read more... )
As far as I can tell from skimming the contents page the Swamp Thing stuff is over now, so, onwards to Hellblazer, and Newcastle.
We had some severe storms come through our area this week, and had tornado sirens going off both in the morning and evening. Luckily the first set of storms had a mild tornado farther south of us. The second set had a potential formation going over us but luckily nothing actually came together and we only got a bit of hail.
( Read more... )