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[No comments] October Film Roundup:

[Comments] (1) September Film Roundup:

In news of TV Spotlight, Sumana and I have caught up on "For All Mankind", Ron Moore's second TV show about how you should never install the software updates. We're enjoying the alt-history even though its treatment of the Internet got really weird in the fourth season. I will say I like the "this space base is really cramped and we're starving/going crazy" setups better than the "there are a lot of people on this space base and we're causing soap opera drama for each other" setups, but they are switching back and forth between them pretty reliably as humanity expands through the solar system.

[Comments] (1) August Film Roundup:

July Film Roundup:

June Film Roundup:

The Coffeeshop AU: My metafictional Great Gatsby fanfic "The Coffeeshop AU" is published in Solsitita issue #3, the appropriately named "Coffeeshop!AU" issue:

"He's in love with Daisy," said Jordan, with as much certainty as if she'd added the tags and written the content note herself. "Maybe Tom," she hedged, "but Tom's an asshole. Daisy's nice enough." This belief of Jordan's — that Daisy was any less obnoxious than Tom — was the first of many alarms I missed as I dropped like a flipped coin on the unalterable trajectory of my relationship with her.

Available for cheap as an EPUB or PDF!

May Film Roundup: I've been putting off writing this for several days now, so short reviews written first thing in the morning will have to do.

April Film Roundup:

March Film Roundup: One of those months where I realize I'd better see a movie quick if I want to have a Film Roundup, and here's the movie:

Since this was a short one, I'll also mention that Sumana and I have been watching a lot of the now-on-hiatus ABC show "Holey Moley," which features a real sports anchor commentating an infernokrusher miniature golf tournament. It's a real "America: The Good Parts" kind of show: a celebration of different kinds of people with diverse skills, who can improvise in ridiculous situations and are willing to charge headlong into seemingly impossible problems. The contrast between the fine motor control necessary to sink a putt and the broad slapstick involved in running up a glycerin-soaked ramp never gets old, or at least it hasn't yet.

The Crummy.com Review of Things 2024: It took me til March, but I pulled it off this year! Here are the best media I experienced (or created) in 2024:

I'll start by tooting my own horn, because why not. I had two stories published in 2024: "Expert Witness" (A Ravy Uvana Story) in Analog and "The Blanket Thief" (cozy fantasy) in the Winter 2024 issue of Baubles From Bones. You can hear me read "Expert Witness" on the Analog podcast.

I gave a talk at PyCon US, How to maintain a popular Python library for most of your life without with burning out", and I was honored with the Python Software Foundation Community Service Award. I wrote two as-yet-unpublished stories in 2024, "A Tomorrow Problem" and "Cause of Action" (both in the Ravy Uvana universe).

Now, on to things not created by me. The Crummy.com Game of the Year is Balatro, a game that doubles down on the part of roguelikes I enjoy the most: the clever creation of wacky, game-breaking combinations from randomly presented choices. Honorable mention to Slice & Dice, the roguelike I have on my phone to stop myself from doomscrolling.

Other games of note: Animal Well and Baldur's Gate 3. I was really into BG3 and played it exclusively up until the point of my Japan trip, but when I came back the spell had been broken and I can't get back into it to finish it.

The Crummy.com Book of the Year is Between Silk and Cyanide by Leo Marks. The story of the codebreakers of Bletchley Park has been well told, but I'd never before considered the parallel story of the people creating codes for Allied intelligence to use. This memoir was a fascinating look into bureaucratic infighting; logistics nightmares; the simultaneous invention of one-time pads; and the difficulties of trying to give cryptographic training to a rotating cast of strong-willed characters who, Wikipedia will tell you, frequently do not survive the war.

I spent a lot of 2024 reading comic crime novels for research. I read a bunch of Donald Westlake's Dortmunder books (Drowned Hopes stands out but I don't recommend that as your first one), Colson Whitehead's Harlem Shuffle and Crook Manifesto, Kyril Bonfiglioli's art scam trilogy (I tried to watch Mortdecai (2015) but couldn't get through the first friggin' scene), and the first three of Sarah Caudwell's academic/lawyer murder mysteries.

Also of note: the manga Yokohama Station SF, The Kamogawa Food Detectives by Hisashi Kashiwai, old issues of the trade publication The Soda Fountain, and the really funny The Husbands by my friend Holly Gramazio.

[Comments] (1) February Film Roundup:

January Film Roundup:

Beautiful Soup 4.13.0: After a beta period lasting nearly a year, I've released the biggest update to Beautiful Soup in many years. For version 4.13.0 I added type hints to the Python code, and in doing so uncovered a large number of very small inconsistencies in the code. I've fixed the inconsistencies, but the result is a larger-than-usual number of deprecations and changes that may break backwards compatibility.

The CHANGELOG for 4.13.0 is quite large so I'm writing this blog post to highlight just the most important changes, specifically the changes most likely to make you need (or want) to change your code.

Deprecations and backwards-incompatible changes

New features

: “Experience keeps a dear school, yet Fools will learn in no other.” —Benjamin Franklin

Miscellaneous 2024 Pictures: Since I went through the trouble of finding a static gallery generator for my Japan photos, I made another portfolio of miscellaneous pictures from the rest of 2024.

Enjoy glimpses of amazing things that were part of my life last year, but which I didn't necessarily take the time to write about here.

[Comments] (1) 2024 Japan trip: I've hinted at this before in NYCB but now I've got my photos organized and I'm ready to talk about the vacation I took in Japan last November. I was nominally on vacation with my friend James, but he was working most days, so I spent a lot of time walking around exploring before meeting him for dinner, which I found to be a great way to run a vacation.

I've put up a huge photo gallery of pictures full of wacky and interesting stuff, but in case you're planning your own visit, here are some of my recommendations:

Finally I want to mention a couple stores that I didn't take pictures of. B-Side Label has cool laptop stickers. There are a few locations; I went to the one in Kyoto.

Second, New Yorkers might remember City Bakery, which sold really great pastries including the legendary pretzel croissant, plus hot chocolate which was way too rich for my taste. In 2019 City Bakery went out of business, leaving Americans croissant-less. But there are twenty City Bakery locations in Japan! We were randomly walking through a mall in Nagoya—bam! City Bakery! Heading to the Kyoto shopping district—City Bakery! They're quite a nostalgia trip, with everything looking and tasting exactly like it did the old City Bakery on 19th street, or maybe 18th, I could never remember. Anyway, that's why I've now got a freezer full of pretzel croissants from halfway across the world.

2024 Film Roundup Roundup: I saw 73 movies in 2024, and twenty were good enough to be added to Film Roundup Roundup, my ever-growing list of over 300 really good movies.

Here's my top ten for 2024. A very big year for Japanese movies, but Hundreds of Beavers takes the gold home for the U.S. of A.

  1. Hundreds of Beavers (2022)
  2. Supermarket Woman (1996)
  3. River (2023)
  4. Tokyo Olympiad (1965)
  5. Slacker (1990)
  6. Dance With Me (2019)
  7. The Big Clock (1948)
  8. A Taxing Woman (1987)
  9. Something Wild (1986)
  10. The Fastest Gun Alive (1956)

The Eater of Meaning is now part of the olipy family: You know that email you get when a website you like is acquired by a big company and you know it's going to get shut down? This is like that, only the website shut down first and then got merged into a bigger project.

In May 2003 I created The Eater of Meaning, a web proxy that changes the words on a web page and renders the results. It was popular for a while in the "blogosphere" and then I kind of forgot about it for 20 years, until it broke in 2024.

Throughout 2024 I got occasional emails from poets about the Eater of Meaning and could I fix it. Upon reflection I decided that while running a public web proxy on my personal website in 2003 was kind of fun, doing so in 2024 is a bad idea. So the CGI script breaking was a blessing in disguise. But I didn't want the Eater of Meaning to disappear entirely because, as I've found out, it's important to some poets' artistic practice.

So I've rewritten the Eater of Meaning code in modern Python, and added it to olipy, my pack of art supplies. With basic Python skills (or even Python package-installing skills) you can have access to just about all of the Eater of Meaning's old functionality, as well as some new eaters based on the other olipy tools. I realize that this isn't as convenient as having it as a proxy on a website, but this is the best I can do for now.

December Film Roundup:

And now, it's time to send off another Star Trek series with this month's Television Spotlight.

November Film Roundup:

November Film Roundup: Hey, how you doing? Me? Not so good. Lots of anxiety. But one of the things that keeps me going is the pleasure of films, and the rounding up thereof, so here we go:

(A) Stand-up to Protect Our Vote: This Saturday, my spouse Sumana will be performing a short comedy set as a fundraiser for the Election Protection Hotline. Donate to a good cause and enjoy some technical humor!

September Film Roundup:

August Film Roundup: Sumana was gone for much of the month, and you know what that means: lots of movies from the 60s and 70s with below-average IMDB ratings!

July Film Roundup: Pressed for time this month so I'm just gonna write some quick reviews and head off to resume my apparently busy life.


This document is part of Crummy, the webspace of Leonard Richardson (contact information). It was last modified on Tuesday, December 08 2020, 19:23:12 Nowhere Standard Time and last built on Monday, November 10 2025, 10:10:03 Nowhere Standard Time.

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