Saturday, Jan 3
Where in the world is Midnight?!! I feel like he’s giving me the evil eye for bothering him. *g*
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( 8 more back here )
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Sometimes Darnielle is able to make this sort of minimalism work for him. And you can see why, even with a track like this where, frankly, it doesn't come together. The chorus has a haunting beauty to it, when he switches from what sounds more like spoken word poetry into something that more resembles a song, and the repetition in the last few lines: before the final chorus:
And your voice on the other end
And the impossibility of your voice on the other end
And the impossible echo inside
That bit right there starts to bring more, lyrically, than when it was just prosaic observations about an ordinary afternoon.
As the song started, I almost hoped we were going to get a soup recipe, in the form of a song, but it transitioned away from the soup. Anyway, this song doesn't quite work for me, but it's not unpleasant or anything. What I am reminded of in two different directions are "What's He Building?" by Tom Waits, which is my core association for the gravelly voiced spoken-rather-than-sung minimalist piece, and, though I am less clear on why listening to this track put me in mind of it, "Don't Know When But a Day is Gonna Come" by Bright Eyes. I think maybe because it is also somewhat minimalist but manages to build in a way that helps it come together quite successfully (it actually boils in a way that this Mountain Goats song doesn't).

Rec The Contents Of Your Last Page: Any website that you like, be it fanfiction, art, social media, or something a bit more eccentric!
I braced for CW-core melodrama in space and instead got a Star Trek show that actually understands Star Trek.
In your own space, create a list of at least three things you'd love to receive, a wishlist of sorts.

Last November we asked the community to submit questions to our OTW volunteers in celebration of International Volunteer Day. In this series of posts we will spotlight some of our committees' responses.
The Translation committee's main responsibility is making content from the OTW and its various projects accessible to fans who don't speak English. This includes content for the organization's main site, FAQs on AO3, Open Doors import announcements, and AO3 news posts, among other things. They also collaborate with other OTW committees, for example to help them communicate with non-English speaking fans and users.
We asked the Translation committee for replies to your questions, and received a lot of feedback! Below you can find a selection of their answers:
Question: Is there a software required if one wanted to volunteer? Also, are there any specific devices required?
Committee answer:
While we have no specific software requirements for volunteering, we definitely recommend using a device with a bigger screen in general, like a desktop or a laptop, or at least a tablet, as that makes it easier to keep everything you need for your work on your screen. One of our requirements for any software we use is that it can run in a common internet browser on a computer, without any local installs, though they may require an app on mobile devices.
How many hours a week do you spend on your OTW volunteer work?
How do you manage your volunteer time, and do you do the same thing every day like with a day job?
What's your favorite part about volunteering at the OTW?
What's the aspect of volunteer work with the OTW that you most wish more people knew about?
What does a typical day as an OTW volunteer looks like for you?
What is your favorite animal? Alternatively, do you have a favorite breed of cat/dog?
Do you enjoy reading fanfic? If so, what's your favorite work on AO3?
Do you write any fanfic yourself? What do you enjoy about it?
What fandoms are you (currently) in?
Do you feel glad or proud to see fanfiction in your mother tongue?
Thanks so much to every volunteer who took the time to answer!
(For more answers from Translation volunteers, check out this work on AO3, where we'll collect additional replies to each question!)
The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, OTW Legal Advocacy, and Transformative Works and Cultures. We are a fan-run, donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.
Last November we asked the community to submit questions to our OTW volunteers in celebration of International Volunteer Day. In this series of posts we will spotlight some of our committees’ responses.
The Translation committee‘s main responsibility is making content from the OTW and its various projects accessible to fans who don’t speak English. This includes content for the organization’s main site, FAQs on AO3, Open Doors import announcements, and AO3 news posts, among other things. They also collaborate with other OTW committees, for example to help them communicate with non-English speaking fans and users.
We asked the Translation committee for replies to your questions, and received a lot of feedback! Below you can find a selection of their answers:
Question: Is there a software required if one wanted to volunteer? Also, are there any specific devices required?
Committee answer:
While we have no specific software requirements for volunteering, we definitely recommend using a device with a bigger screen in general, like a desktop or a laptop, or at least a tablet, as that makes it easier to keep everything you need for your work on your screen. One of our requirements for any software we use is that it can run in a common internet browser on a computer, without any local installs, though they may require an app on mobile devices.
How many hours a week do you spend on your OTW volunteer work?
How do you manage your volunteer time, and do you do the same thing every day like with a day job?
What’s your favorite part about volunteering at the OTW?
What’s the aspect of volunteer work with the OTW that you most wish more people knew about?
What does a typical day as an OTW volunteer looks like for you?
What is your favorite animal? Alternatively, do you have a favorite breed of cat/dog?
Do you enjoy reading fanfic? If so, what’s your favorite work on AO3?
Do you write any fanfic yourself? What do you enjoy about it?
What fandoms are you (currently) in?
Do you feel glad or proud to see fanfiction in your mother tongue?
Thanks so much to every volunteer who took the time to answer!
(For more answers from Translation volunteers, check out this work on AO3, where we’ll collect additional replies to each question!)
Jesse Ventura has had a successful career as a pro wrestler, actor, and politician — all largely built on the foundations of his mastery of pro wrestling rhetoric. And recent events have brought him back into the public eye. His Jan. 8 interview on the Minneapolis Fox News channel got 2.7 million likes and more than 47 thousand comments on TikTok, lots of play on other news-ish outlets, 295k views and more than 7400 comments on YouTube, and 3.7 million views and more than 1400 comments on X.
See "The art of the promo" (10/31/2020) for some background on this rhetorical style, including its role in Donald Trump's career. And if you haven't listened to Ventura's interview, you should do so as background for this post.
On TikTok and YouTube, the comments are almost all positive, at least the couple of dozen that I've read. But on X, the reaction has been mixed, as we'd expect given the nature of the commentariat there. I spent a few minutes trying to figure out how to scrape the whole set of comments so as to pull a random sample to classify, but X's sidebar invited me to ask Grok, so I did — with plausible results.
Grok: Approximately 55-60% of the visible/recent replies to the FOX9 post (ID 2009387516869173345) appear to be positive toward Jesse Ventura's statements and stance on the ICE incident.
From a sample of around 50-60 direct replies and early quoted context (fetched via latest mode, focusing on the conversation thread as of January 10, 2026):
This is not an exact count of all 1,442+ replies (sampling captures the most recent and visible ones, which tend to reflect broader sentiment trends on polarizing political topics). High-engagement positive replies (e.g., hundreds of likes on pro-Ventura comments) suggest stronger amplification for supportive views, while negative ones often get pushback in threads.Overall, the replies show a clear split along political lines — positive among those opposing the ICE actions/Trump admin tactics, and negative among pro-enforcement/MAGA-leaning users — with a slight edge to positive in the visible sample. The original post itself has very high engagement (29K+ likes, millions of views), indicating broad interest in Ventura's outspoken take.
This is similar to my own classification of the "visible/recent replies", but I wondered what a sample of the whole set would show, so I asked again:
Grok: From a randomized sample of approximately 120-130 direct replies pulled across multiple fetches (Latest mode, focusing on a broad spread of timestamps from the post's creation on Jan 8 through early Jan 10, 2026, including both low- and higher-engagement ones), the sentiment breaks down as follows:
, Bravo!), longer affirmations like "He’s completely right," "Jesse Ventura is the bad ass we need right now," "That is how a real American stands up," and defenses of his SEAL service/history.This sample shows a slight majority positive (around 60%), consistent with the visible/high-engagement trend in the thread—where supportive replies (especially those highlighting his veteran status or constitutional points) receive more amplification and likes. The split remains heavily polarized along ideological lines:
Note: This is still sampling (not exhaustive of all ~1,447 replies), but the randomization across fetches reduces bias toward just the most recent or viral ones. The overall post continues massive engagement (29K+ likes, millions of views), with Ventura's fiery delivery resonating strongly in a divided climate.
Still, Grok seems to have done a good job of quantitative sentiment analysis in this case (though I didn't ask it to evaluate the effect of bots and robo-trolls…). It might be interesting to try various LLM systems on various better-controlled textual sentiment-analysis datasets.
This one isn't part of the standard sets of football drills — but it seems to be having a good effect on locker room atmosphere.
It's interesting that two of the immediate answers, "giraffe" for G-F and "zone" for Z-N, are based on pronunciation rather than spelling — phonics FTW!
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Free for All Saturday, Week 2 [DW Edition]
↑↑↑ Available dates:
January 13 & 15
January 20 & 22
January 27 & 29
Hi and welcome to our weekly Free for All day. :D There are no themes to follow for prompts or fills. If, perhaps, you missed a prompt theme that you liked, or you've had any ideas that didn't really work with Tuesday's or Thursday's posts, then today's your chance to prompt 'em. Be free, and have fun! ✎
Just a few rules:
1. No more than five prompts in a row.
2. No more than three prompts in the same fandom.
3. Use the character's full name and the fandom's full name for ease in adding to the Lonely Prompts spreadsheet.
4. No spoilers in prompts for a month after airing, or use the spoiler cut option found here. Unfortunately, DW doesn’t have a cut tag, so use your best judgment when it comes to spoilers.
5. If your fill contains spoilers, warn and leave plenty of space, or use the spoiler cut.
6. If your story has possible triggers, please warn for them in the subject line!
Prompts should be formatted as follows: [Use the character's full names and fandom's full name]
Fandom, Character +/ Character, Prompt
Are today's prompts not catching your eye? No worries, because we have plenty of older prompts that just might do the trick! You can browse through the comm's calendar archive (here on LJ or here on DW) for themed and Free For All posts, or perhaps check out Sunday posts for Lonely Prompt requests. (Or, you can be like me, and try to save interesting prompts as you see 'em... and then end up with multiple text doc files full of [themes + links + prompts] that you can easily look through and search for keywords.) Multiple fills for one prompt are welcome, by the way! Oh, and you are very likely to find some awesome fills to read as well, and wouldn't it be nice to leave a comment on those lovely little writing distractions? ~_^
We are on AO3! If you fill a prompt and post it to AO3, please add it to the Bite Sized Bits of Fic from 2026 collection.
If you are viewing this post on our Dreamwidth site: please know that fills posted here will not show up as comments on our LiveJournal site, but you are still more than welcome to participate. =)
If you have a Dreamwidth account and would feel more comfortable participating there, please feel free to do so… and spread the word!
A friendly reminder about our posting schedule: Themed posts for new prompts go up on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Saturdays are a Free for All day for new prompts of any flavor. Sundays are for showing Lonely Prompts some love, whether by requesting for someone to adopt them or by sharing any fills that you've recently completed.