Wednesday, July 02, 2025

Movie and TV Reviews - June 2025

Movies and TV shows that Nancy and I watched in May. I do these posts mainly so I can keep track of what we've been watching, so the reviews are cursory. Now that baseball season has started, there will probably be fewer items here.

Movies

  • Titanic: The Digital Restoration. A National Geographic documentary about the creation of a digital replica of the Titanic. I found it absolutely fascinating and it's remarkable what it revealed about the sinking. (Disney+)
  • Predator: Killer of Killers. Three warriors from three different eras fight the Predators. Animated (and quite nicely done) but not for kids (extreme violence, natch). (Disney+)
  • The Accountant: Autism as a superpower. Entertaining enough, but not very plausible. (Amazon Prime)
  • The Accountant 2: This one veered into more standard action flick territory. Not as good as the first one. (Amazon Prime)


TV Shows

  • The Last of US (season 2): I'm not sure it's quite as good as the first season, but it's equally grim. We can't handle more than one episode a night. (Crave/HBO)
  • Injustice. A twisty and well-acted crime drama featuring a couple of lawyers and a rather unpleasant detective determined to get at the truth no matter what the cost. (Acorn TV)
  • Hinterland (seasons 1-3), Another British police procedural, set in Wales. As we expected, it's on the grim side, but with good acting and well-written, twisty plots. It does go a bit too far with the troubled detective trope though,. (Acorn TV)

Tuesday, July 01, 2025

Happy Canada Day

It's Canada Day up here in the Great Green North. The flowers in our backyard are loving the warm weather though I suspect they would like a bit more rain. The garden is happy and with any luck we might get some tomatoes this year. 

So a BBQ, beer, and fireworks today as we celebrate all things Canadian. 

Here's some colourful natural fireworks from our backyard.

Two bushes of small yellow and purple flowers
Backyard flowers


Monday, June 30, 2025

Featured Links - June 30, 2025

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

This week's post is shorter than usual. We have a kitchen reno coming up in a week and I'm pretty busy right now. And there's a yard and garden to take care of. So posts here are going to be shorter and/or sparser than usual for a while.

A flock of birds on and over a nesting platform in a marsh
Birds in the hydro marsh

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Photo of the Week - June 29, 2025

Nancy and I walked down to the lakefront Friday evening and there were a couple of swans in the marina lagoon. I managed to get a picture of one flapping it's wings  before it ducked underwater in search of food. Taken with my Pixel 8 Pro. 

A swan flapping its wings preparing to dive
A swan flapping its wings preparing to dive


Saturday, June 28, 2025

Saturday Sounds - Tyreek McDole - Open Up Your Senses

This week's musical treat is a new album from a young performer who is new to me, Tyreek McDole. I was listening to SiriusXM and heard what I first thought was Pharoah Sanders' "The Creator Has a Master Plan", but it wasn't Pharoah's version, a piece of music I've been listening to for more than 50 years. Instead, it was a track from McDole's debut album, Open Up Your Senses

From the label's press release announcing the album:

At just 25 years old, the Haitian-American, New York-based baritone has already earned significant acclaim, including winning the prestigious Sarah Vaughan International Jazz Vocal Competition in 2023 — one of only two male vocalists to achieve this honor in the competition’s 12-year history. Jazz scholar Will Friedwald, who also contributes liner notes to the project, referred to McDole as “the leading jazz voice of his generation” and acclaimed DJ Gilles Peterson said “it is refreshing to hear a new voice that is so clearly connected to the tradition but also pushing it forward with such strong energy. This is a brilliant opening statement from someone I reckon will be around for some time.”

Open Up Your Senses is a bold statement from a young artist who masterfully blends tradition with innovation. Featuring standout performances by pianist and arranger Caelan Cardello and saxophonist Dylan Band, McDole’s debut evokes the legacy of jazz greats while forging his own distinctive path.

The album’s repertoire highlights McDole’s penchant for spiritually resonant and philosophically rich material. His stirring rendition of Leon Thomas’ “The Creator Has a Master Plan” features a powerful solo from Tomoki Sanders, progeny of saxophone legend Pharoah Sanders. Meanwhile, his interpretation of Thelonious Monk’s “Ugly Beauty” (with lyrics by Mike Ferro) is enhanced by a special guest appearance from legendary pianist Kenny Barron.

I'm not usually a big fan of jazz singers, but I like this album a lot. The tracks feature a talented group of musicians playing in a variety of styles and McDole is a compelling singer. Enjoy. 


Wednesday, June 25, 2025

The USA versus Canada 8

The relationship between Canada and the US is and contin
uing to change. It's clear that Prime Minister Mark Carney is determined to reduce Canadian dependence on the US and he seems to have the support of most Canadians and Parliament. Here are some articles covering what's happened over the last month. 

Request: I am curious to know how much of this is being reported in US media. I'd appreciate comments with links if you can provide them. 

The Gordie Howe International Bridge between Detroit and Windsor
Gordie Howe International Bridge between Detroit and Windsor

  • Nation-Building in the North from science fiction author and futurist, Karl Schroeder. "Canada is reconfiguring itself as a strategic global power. How does that work?" I hope that people in Carney's administration are reading Schroeder. (As an aside, the leader of the Bloc Quebecois reads Robert J. Sawyer.)
  • Republicans say tax retaliation proposal could be cut from Trump bill if international deal can be reached. "The provision would impose a progressive tax burden of up to 20 per cent on foreign investors’ U.S. income, raising concerns on Wall Street about the attractiveness of U.S. investments." If dividend income from US stocks held by Canadian investors starts getting taxed, there is going to be a big sell-off here. 
  • Trump's 'revenge tax' on other countries could hit U.S. "Tax that could hit Canadians comes with risk to U.S. revenue, investments."
  • American Climate Scientists Have a New Canadian Hero. "How McGill professor Juan Serpa created SUSAN, the online forum helping U.S. researchers protect their data from Trump."
  • Last Year's Move to Toronto And This Year's Politics (video and commentary) from historian and author, Timothy Snyder, one of the many academics who have moved from the US to Canada. 
  • The US Badly Needs Rare Minerals and Fresh Water. Guess Who Has Them? "As China tightens its grip on critical resources, Trump eyes Canada’s riches."
  • Canada Torches the Trump Umbilical Cord: Bill C-5 Passed, EU Trade/Security Partnership Signed, and Our Democratic Break From America Begins. "A Historic Pact with the EU Signals Canada’s Rise as a Sovereign Power—and a Sharp Rejection of Trump’s Tariff Bullying and War-First Chaos." Blundell can be a bit hyperbolic (a friend described him as 'shouty') but if you are interested in this subject, he's worth following. 
  • Fact Checking "Cosplay Kristi" Noem's Latest Canada Smear. "No, Governor Noem—Canada Isn't a Narco-State, Trudeau Never Worked With You, and Fentanyl Isn’t Flowing North."

  • 2025 Locus Awards Winners

    The winners of the 2025 Locus Awards Winners have been announced. The awards are voted by subscribers and readers of Locus Magazine, the SFF field's long-running newsmagazine.

    These are the winners of the fiction awards.

  • Science Fiction Novel: The Man Who Saw Seconds, Alexander Boldizar 
  • Fantasy Novel: A Sorceress Comes to Call, T. Kingfisher
  • Horror Novel: Bury Your Gays, Chuck Tingle 
  • Young Adult Novel: Moonstorm, Yoon Ha Lee 
  • First Novel: Someone You Can Build a Nest In, John Wiswell 
  • Novella: What Feasts at Night, T. Kingfisher
  • Novelette: “By Salt, By Sea, By Light of Stars“, Premee Mohamed 
  • Short Story: “Why Don’t We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole“, Isabel J. Kim

  • Someone You Can Build a Nest in won the 2024 Nebula Award for Best Novel. Back in April, I said that I would be disappointed if “Why Don’t We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole“ didn't win the Short Story Hugo Award. It may yet and I'm not at all surprised that it has won a Nebula Award and now a Locus Award. It's a remarkable story that works on many levels. 

    Monday, June 23, 2025

    Featured Links - June 23, 2025

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

    Red and purple flowers in a flower basket
    Flowers in our backyard
  • The MAGA Debt Bomb. "How Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” Turns America’s Fiscal Crisis Into a Weapon for Authoritarian Looting." The adults in the financial world are getting worried.
  • FEMA is unprepared for the next Hurricane Katrina, disaster experts warn. "Cuts, chaos, and climate change are converging to leave Americans more vulnerable to disaster than they were in 2005." 
  • How the Grateful Dead built the internet. "Before the the internet took over the world, psychedelic rock band The Grateful Dead were among the first – and most influential – forces at the dawn of online communication." Fascinating history showing how music an culture intersected with the early digital revolution, focusing mostly on The Well. I was never on The Well but made extensive use of rec.music.gdead on Usenet once I got onto the real internet in the early 90s. 
  • 'They quit after a few hours': Farmers admit they can't find American workers. "In a deep dive focusing on one farmer who voted for Trump, 36-year-old J.J. Ficke of Kirk, Colorado, the Washington Post is reporting that he along with other farmers are facing possible ruination now that the round-up of immigrants have begun in earnest and promised helpis uncertain."
  • New study suggests Long COVID is now most common childhood chronic health problem. "In a summary of the study's findings geared to the general public and published on the JAMA Pediatrics Patient Page, three of the authors of the longer study state that Long COVID is common, and, based on the larger study's finding, estimate that up to 10 to 20 percent of children who have had COVID-19 — even "mild" or asymptomatic initial infections — develop Long COVID. This translates to about six million children with Long COVID, which, the authors explain, "is higher than the number of children with asthma, the most common chronic health problem in children."'
  • 1 psychedelic psilocybin dose eases depression for years, study reveals. "Half a decade after receiving a psychedelic treatment for depression, two-thirds of patients in a new study remained in remission."
  • New theory proposes time has three dimensions, with space as a secondary effect. "Time, not space plus time, might be the single fundamental property in which all physical phenomena occur, according to a new theory by a University of Alaska Fairbanks scientist. The theory also argues that time comes in three dimensions rather than just the single one we experience as continual forward progression. Space emerges as a secondary manifestation."
  • Interview: Craig Federighi Opens Up About iPadOS, Its Multitasking Journey, and the iPad’s Essence. As a new iPad user, I found this quite fascinating. 
  • How should we respond to people “doing their own research?”. "It’s become a punchline—but it points to something broken in how we share health information."
  • Narrative Theory for Science Communication by author Mary Robinette Kowal. "In this workshop, we learn how to use the foundations of storytelling to help you be more successful with science communication. Pretty much every story, fictional or nonfictional, can be explained through a fairly simple organizational theory. Together, we learn how to use these tools to connect more effectively with your audiences."