Tuesday, December 02, 2025

Posts Will Be Sparse This Month

I haven't been able to keep up with a regular posting schedule this month. Part of that is just being too busy with household problems (a dead washing machine soon to be replaced) and prep for the holidays. I'm also having some eye problems, which I'm hoping will clear up over the next month (bad dry eye) and that's making it hard for me to read.

I don't want to shut the blog down but it's likely to be quiet here until early January. 

Monday, December 01, 2025

Movie and TV Reviews - November 2025

Movies and TV shows that Nancy and I watched in November. I do these posts mainly so I can keep track of what we've been watching, so the reviews are cursory. 

Movies

  • Goodnight Oppy: A BBC documentary about the Spirit and Opportunity Mars rovers. Quite good and gives a sense of just how remarkable this mission was. (Amazon Prime)
  • Frankenstein: I enjoyed it though I found it hard to watch (many dark scenes) and some of the changes from the novel confused me. I found it interesting that Del Torro updated the technology in the story (all the electrical stuff, for example) to a late Victorian level, even though the story is set in the 1830s. The gothic tone is faithful to the book even if some of the characters and details vary. (Netflix)
  • Deep Cover: A trio of improv actors gets hired by the police to pose a criminals to entrap a drug dealer. Things go spectacularly wrong. A good popcorn movie but not much more. (Prime)
  • The Family Plan 1 and 2: Extremely implausible but still somehow watchable. More popcorn movies. (Apple TV)

TV

  • The Nature of Things: Implosion. Documentary about the Titan submersible disaster. Should have been longer. 
  • Slow Horses (season 5): A bit lighter than some of the earlier seasons but still enjoyable. 
  • Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. Three-part documentary about the disastrous Woodstock '99 festival What were they thinking? (Apple TV)
  • Only Murders in the Building (season 5): The plots continue to be implausible, but we are enjoying it. Steve Martin is brilliant, as always. (Disney+)
  • Antiques Road Trip (seaon 12). Only four more seasons to go and we will have watched all of them, (PBS)
  • Beyond Paradise (season 3): The season finally continues after the Christmas episode. I'm enjoying this one more than earlier seasons; not all episodes revolve around murders. (BritBox)
  • Lazarus: We had high hopes for this because it was based on a novel by Harlen Coben. But we only got through about 20 minutes of the first episode before giving up. If you like shows about troubled psychiatrists having visions of dead people you will like it; we didn't. (Amazon Prime)
  • Code of Silence: BritBox has been heavily promoting this show about a deaf cleaner who gets hired by the police to lip read to help in an investigation. It's a bit implausible but quite watchable. (BritBox)
  • Only Murders in the Building (Season 5): The deaths continue at the troubled Arcadia as the intrepid podcasters try to find the killers. (Disney+)
  • Murder Is Easy: An adaptation of a story by Agatha Christie. This one turned out better than I expected, though that's not saying much. (BritBox)
  • I, Jack Wright: A British brick magnate dies suddenly and his family implodes in spectacular fashion. Grim, twisted, dark, and made with that special brand of dark humour t hat the Brits do so well. But the ending ... there had beter be a second season. (BritBox)

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Featured Links - November 25, 2025

Things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.

A lifeguard station at Scarborough Bluffs
Lifeguard station at Scarborough Bluffs
  • Reinventing the Subsistence Economy. "How Energy and Food Decoupling Rewrite the Map of Post-Growth Futures." An optimistic look at a possible future from Karl Schroeder.
  • The Terminator Future Has Arrived. "Gaza represents a future of warfare that will be repeated elsewhere as the algorithms are proving efficient, merciless and remorseless."
  • The Worst Part About Publishing a Book in 2025 Is The New Kind of Spam. Authors are getting buried in targetted AI-authored spam. 
  • Google’s New Gmail Upgrades—Why You Must Choose Carefully. Unless you live in the EU, Google may be opting you in to giving them access to your private data.
  • Russian Unreality and American Weakness. "Notes from a bizarre moment of diplomatic history." An absolutely devastating take down of the proposed "peace plan" to end the Ukranian war from historian Timothy Synder. 
  • Open the pod bay doors, HAL (Arguing with A.I.). A detailed post showing how AI can provide misleading results, with examples.
  • Bitcoin isn't anonymous — investigators can trace every transaction on the blockchain. Just in case you thought all those drug buys were safe. 
  • Monday, November 24, 2025

    Photo of the Week - November 24, 2025

    This week's photo is of a lifeguard station at the Scarborough Bluffs park. Of course, there were no life guards on duty this time of year. Taken with my Pixel 8 Pro.

    Lifeguard station at the Scarborough Bluffs
    Lifeguard station at the Scarborough Bluffs

     

    Saturday, November 22, 2025

    Saturday Sounds - Philip Glass and Tenzin Choegyal - Be the Sky

    This week's musical treat is a new album from Philip Glass and Tenzin Chiegyal, Be the Sky. I've just listened to this and love it.

    From Google: "Be The Sky" is a recent album collaboration between composer Philip Glass and Tibetan musician Tenzin Choegyal, released on November 14, 2025. The album is described as a collaboration born from their two-decade friendship, blending Glass's minimalist style with Tibetan musical traditions. It's a musical tribute to the Dalai Lama and serves as an offering of hope and spirituality.'

    It's one of Glass' best works since Glassworks. Beautiful, ethereal, contemplative music for the soul. Enjoy. 


    Friday, November 21, 2025

    An Update on Our LG TV

    Two years in on our LG C3 TV and I am finally starting to get comfortable with the native LG interface. We've been using either the Rogers apps or casting from the Chromecast. But the Rogers remote is a bit awkward to use and the Chromecast can be glitchy with some services (Disney+ in particular).

    LG recently upgraded their WebOS and it's quite usable, although with my vision I occasionally have to get up to get closer to the TV. My main problem with it is that the remote is not backlit, a major omission for a TV that's likely to be used in a dim room. (It does have voice control, which I have yet to set up, but I will get to it).
    There is also an app for Android that can be used in place of the remote and does finally seem to work the way it should. I had tried it when we first got the TV and found it had issues with the earlier version of WebOS.
    Now I am in the process of getting the various apps for services that we use to work. More on that another time.

    Thursday, November 20, 2025

    A Significant Anniversary

    I saw my first Grateful Dead concert on this day in 1970. Five minutes into their set, I was a Deadhead for life. Apparently, only one audience tape has survived the perils of time; if the sound crew recorded the show, it's been lost. That's sad because the jam with Jorma Kaukonen of the Jefferson Airplane, who were playing at a different venue the same night, is worth a listen. (Jack Casady may also have played; my memory is fuzzy, though some reports suggest he did play).

    From Rolling Stone: "Serendipitously, the Jefferson Airplane were playing the War Memorial in Rochester, New York, the same 1970 evening that the Dead were doing a college late-nighter. So after his band’s gig ended, Airplane guitar pilot Jorma Kaukonen headed over to campus to join the Dead for a hot take on the Bobby Womack-via-Rolling Stones nugget “It’s All Over Now,” some smoking blues jams (both country and Chicago-style) and a rocking rendition of the old folk standard “Darling Corey.” Sketchy sound on the surviving bootlegs, but fiery playing."