Retaining the same format, Walt Disney Presents switched networks after twenty-one years, in part to take advantage of NBC’s capability of colour broadcasts (with prescience having filmed many of its earlier episodes produced to air on ABC in TechniColor for re-broadcast on its new station, like the BBC’s footage of the coronation of Elizabeth II in 3D yet mostly unseen as the technology has not been widely adopted) and also owing to ongoing tensions between ABC and Disney over the channel’s refusal to divest itself from the latter’s theme parks as a large stakeholder, premiering on this day in 1961 with the new anthology series introductory pilot (presented by Ludwig von Drake, voiced by Paul Frees, on the visual spectrum and colour theory with the National Broadcasting Corporation’s peacock mascot assisting) and his nephew Donald in Mathmagic Land as the second part. The debut is credited with doubling the sales of colour televisions and for placating Federal Communications Commission chairman Newton N Minow and turning around his opinion after his pronouncement that television in America was a “vast wasteland” with an educational and informative instance of the media that promised more quality programming.
Wednesday, 24 September 2025
wonderful world of colour (12. 756)
Monday, 22 September 2025
8x8 (12. 749)
ephemeral 80s: a side project from Curios British Telly
informal collaborator: methods of surveillance and monitoring by the Iron Curtain
consumer expenditures: Bureau Labour Statistics, under pressure from the Trump administration’s push for a rosy economic outlook postponed releasing a key annual report—see previously
the vela incident: a mysterious double flash in the India ocean was detected on this day in 1979, thought to be an undeclared nuclear test
just look where you’re walking or you’ll get ko’d by the gauntlet of misshapened zucchini-descendant bastards swinging from above: it’s that time again—see previously
estแดฐ: an archive of derelict shopfronts from the 1970s and 1980s of East London
disgruntled nomenclature: a list of American college presidents—drawn from a 1973 yearbook of higher education—are particularly interchangeable and revealing of patriarchical power structures
upstairs, downstairs: seven decades of ITV on the anniversary of its founding, breaking the BBC broadcast monopoly
synchronoptica
one year ago: Bilbo Baggins’ birthday (with synchronopticรฆ), St Mauritius, first contact plus a presidential assassination attempt (1975)
twelve years ago: Singapore’s Super Trees, bad real estate photographs plus untamed houseplants
thirteen years ago: promoting women executives
fourteen years ago: safe overtaking plus the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell
fifteen years ago: a classic iPad sleeve
sixteen years ago: our little travel blog
seventeen years ago: de-logistics
Friday, 19 September 2025
this week tonite (12. 741)
Via Super Punch, we glean this little fact of television heritage and show-DNA, though mindful that this is the news and crisis that the US administration wants us to be talking about rather than war, trade, financial misdeeds or sex-crimes: Live! hosted by comedian Jimmy Kimmel debuting in January of 2003 was the mid-season replacement for Bill Maher’s Politically Incorrect when ABC (under its then newly acquired parent corporation of Walt Disney) cancelled the late-night panel show after the moderator took exception with US foreign policy and with the characterisation by the Bush government that the 9/11 terrorists were “cowards”—“although terrible people,” they were not cowards, “What was cowardly, Maher rebuked, “was America’s relationship with the rest of the world.” Too soon perhaps but far from a full-throated endorsement of al Qaeda, causing complaints to roll in and advertisers retreat from the programme. Of course back then, there was also no coercion from hypocritical government officials to self-censor editorialising or free-speech.
synchronoptica
one year ago: the Oscars of US government workers (with synchronopticรฆ), getting to philosophy, Israel attacks Hezbollah with booby-trapped walkie-talkies plus sinkholes and megaslumps
thirteen years ago: a theme song for a blog plus auditory cues
fourteen years ago: Germany’s Pirate Party
fifteen years ago: Moore’s Law and quantum computing
seventeen years ago: a turn in the weather
Wednesday, 17 September 2025
pious fictions (12. 737)
McSweeney’s Internet Tendency contributor Carlos Greaves shares an uncharacteristically sobering flowchart, decision-tree on telling the difference between a lone wolf and a coordinated effort by the radical left. The parallel construction triangulates with a lecture series by tech oligarch Peter Thiel embracing the language of the apocalypse—rebuffing, redirecting worries over AI godhead with talks that appeal to particularly American obsessions of naming the Antichrist and belief in angels and demons (environmental activist Greta Thunberg is a favourite target of the influential billionaire for the Great Satan—in the parlance and policing of y’all Qaeda) and the censoring of media outlets with producer son David of Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison looking to acquire CNN after taking over Paramount-Skydance with consequences already apparent, Trump’s Federal Communications Commission bullying ABC-Disney into cancelling another popular late night talk show critical of the administration, the divestiture of US TikTok to a MAGA cadre to transform it into a propaganda mill far worse than any hand wringing over China, and the Washington Post dismissing a veteran journalist for reporting the news and calling out sophistry.
Friday, 12 September 2025
chryons (12. 720)
Via Waxy, and perhaps a better way to absorb the shock of breaking headlines that one can otherwise manage to avoid and tune-in voluntarily to the outlet of one’s choice, which presents a roll of live but not scrolling, automatically refreshing and unlinked screen grabs of the lower third of selected news sources (see a sister-project for front pages here also from Riley Walz), a graphic overlay or ticker that appear in the bottom portion of the screen (not necessarily taking up that much attention real estate), in the title-safe area, the margins of display. The above synonymous title term is a genericised trademark—see previously—of the Chyron Corporation, the company founded in 1966 that pioneered broadcast titling and graphic generators, named after the superlative mythological centaur for the integration of text and pictures on live TV. Whilst on the one hand hand making one chase after what’s next with this format and time-stamp, it also it a nice governor and a meditation on how headlines undergo fossilisation in the media onslaught.
synchronoptica
one year ago: a nineteenth century puppet theatre (with synchronopticรฆ), New York’s Chelsea Hotel, branding wild horses plus Haile Selassie deposed (1974)
thirteen years ago: corporate welfare, Swiss banking secrecy toppled plus a consortium of European museums goes online
fourteen years ago: reflections on 9/11 plus fiscal discipline and fiduciary disciples
fifteen years ago: Arianne Huffington on America’s decline
seventeen years ago: more reflections on 11 September
Thursday, 11 September 2025
film als magisches ritual (12. 718)


synchronoptica
one year ago: search engine optimisation (with synchronopticรฆ), transcribing presidential debates plus tales of Chemical Romance
twelve years ago: a visit to the Sonnenburg
fourteen years ago: design for houseplants
Sunday, 7 September 2025
mending fences (12. 705)
Broadcast on a 12 September episode of The Tonight Show whilst a congressional inquiry and a JAG inquest into the commanding officers involved in the incident were still on going—ultimately reinstating the lieutenant colonel to his position of command and clearing him and subordinates of all charges of wrong-doing—on this day in 1961, host Jack Paar of the long running NBC late-night talk show taped a segment in West Berlin in front of the Brandenburg Gate with four television cameras interviewing a group of some sixty US soldiers, along with panelist and announcer Peggy Cass (Agnes Gooch from Auntie Mame) whom brought along their Jeeps and guns, augmenting the staff of six usually assigned to guard the checkpoint complete with extra artillery and armaments just as the Wall was being erected. Veteran Army sergeant Parr interviewed several of the gathered guests while East German border patrol monitored the situation with bewilderment. The chief complaint of the Pentagon and the senate was such an uncoordinated stunt for the cameras could provoke an international incident (see also) or worse. Critics regarded the airing of the footage underwhelming, produced in conjunction with Radio Free Berlin, a disappointment considering all the trouble caused, inspiring no patriotic pride nor real entertainment value.
Sunday, 31 August 2025
mister bean and the smear campaign (12. 686)
Via Nag on the Lake and Memo of the Air—although we could not really really find any affinity—nor notes for—this catalogue of the weirdest and worst novelty songs, to have been graced with music videos, we did appreciate the presentation from Vole Television with clever interstitials like classic bumpers from MTV. The title track—“(I want to be) Elected”—was produced by Bruce Dickinson (not a single-issue voter and well before Rowan Atkinson became one) for the Red Nose comic relief charity and was included in the closing coverage before purdah by BBC Parliament in 1992. Going through more of the playlist, we do find that there are VH-1 pop-up video style commentary and factoids and also features Lieutenant Pigeon, so maybe some measure of kindredness. Tag your favourites.
synchronoptica
one year ago: the dissolution of East Germany (with synchronopticรฆ) plus a banger from George Harrison
Monday, 25 August 2025
most sacred and cherished symbol (12. 673)
Though just another feckless executive order and virtue signalling (plus a distraction) to his base—as President Bartlett said there’s no epidemic of flag-burning in protest after entertainer Penn Jillette stirred controversy with sleight of hand trick and asks deputy chief of staff, “What if we burned a flag, not in protest, but in celebration of the very freedoms that allow us to burn a flag—the freedoms that everyone who has ever worked in this magnificent building has pledged to preserve and protect?”—and against the 1989 landmark supreme court decision that affirmed such actions as protected speech under the first amendment, the Trump administration has directed officials in the justice department to prosecute flag burning in a way that does not violate the constitution, directing the attorney general to prioritise laws against desecration in connection with other crimes to allow for revocation of visas and deportation of foreign nationals, promising jail time for the offence and suggesting loss of citizenship. Describing the act as “uniquely offensive and provocative,” Trump has always had a particular preoccupation with such acts (see above case protecting “fighting words”)—whilst rubbish the principles behind it—and when a regime tells one what flags cannot be burned, it will next tell one which flags cannot be waved. Creeping—nay galloping—despotism aside, those who insist a symbol is sacrosanct and inviolable also keep it off their crappy merchandise. “Did you go to law school?” “No, clown school.”
7x7 (12. 671)
many happy returns: belated happy blogoversaries to Miss Cellania and Art for Housewives
then they took him and brought him to a meeting of the areopagus: Peter Thiel’s lecture series sponsored by Acts XVII Collective
oh the huge manatee: dugongs are making a return to the South China Sea after being declared functionally extinct
cavlinball court: Justic Kentanji Brown Jackson has a name for her lawless SCOTUS
no brat, no hot girl, no barbenheimer: trudging through the exhausting Summer of Nothing
sadopopulism: Trump and the Marquis
diastros, emergencia, ruin: a weather spot from The Fast Show, a BBC2 sketch comedy airing from 1994 to 1997
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links worth the revisit (with synchronopticรฆ) plus a visit to Hermannsfeld
fourteen years ago: junk drawers and stockpiling
fifteen years ago: a medical scare
Saturday, 2 August 2025
medicare bears (12. 628)
The latest syndicated comic from Rubin Bolin for the CBS Saturday morning line up gets on notes and perfectly encapsulates the network’s obsequiousness to the regime in order to secure a merger between the Paramount and Sundance catalogue, welcoming in a demerit system for content that does not reflect its values and a hall-monitor for reporting in order to vouchsafe its capitulation in terms of journalistic integrity, targeted by the Trump administration’s federal communications commission (FCC) following allegations of editing an interview with candidate Kamala Harris as news distortion and paid a nominal settlement, even though the segment in question was not a debate and subject to standard practices of cleaning up prior to air. In addition to monetary concession, the network agreed to install an ombudsman to monitor CBS news for bias. Prior to the deal, the media clearinghouses had joint stakes in franchises like Star Trek and Mission: Impossible and Transformers, but Paramount wanted assets like Nickelodeon and SpongeBob to include derivative spin-offs. Critics have decried this blatant act of bribery for an acquiescent parent company (it seems a bit preferable when American TV was controlled by defence contractors and were capable of push-back.
Thursday, 31 July 2025
11 x 11 (12. 622)
ped x’ing: an urban hawk takes advantage of a crosswalk signal to shield it from view as it stalks its pigeon bounty—via Clive Thompson’s Linkfest
whispering gallery mode: peacock plumage can be induced to emit lasers—via the New Shelton wet/dry
pix: US government going after Brazil’s native digital payment platform—calling it an unfair barrier to trade—meanwhile only President Lula da Silva is standing up to Trump’s tariff bullying
showrunner: Amazon investing in AI start-up Fable that allows subscribers to make their own TV shows
pro-somnolence: the technique of cognitive shuffling to quiet the mind and get back to sleep
the candy factory: the unique artists’ commune in New York City founded by Ann Ballentine—via Messy Nessy Chic
query-agnostic adversarial triggers: feline-related textual asides cause marked increase in AI error rates
one year ago, america was a dead country, now it is the hottest country anywhere in the world: Trump escalates trade war with Canada as Carney suggests they may miss the deadline
living batteries: cable bacteria thriving in muddy harness chemical gradients to create and electrical circuit and get oxygen in an anoxic environment
starling network: Benn Jordan saved a .PNG image to a bird by turning a drawing into audio which could be mimicked and reproduced, see also—via Waxy
Friday, 18 July 2025
9x9 (12. 588)
may every day be another wonderful secret: a round up on the Epstein files and Trump’s tantrums—for MAGA, Nazis are cool but they’re drawing the line here—at least there’s a line, hopefully
infra-realism: off-the-spectrum photographs of Palm Springs California by Kate Ballis—see previously
power of the purse: a much diminished US legislator’s concessions to the directive of the administration not only slashes the budget for public broadcasting and foreign aid, it also signals their redundancy as a rubber stamp for the executive branch
let’s go fly a kite: instead of windmills, Ireland tries an alternative to harness energy

photovoltaic array: a gallery of images from China showing the future of clean, renewable energy
fascism for first time founders: the broligraghy, the dictator trap and the invisible brain-drain
long photographs: contemplative landscapes from Noah Kalina
the colbert report: CBS cancelling The Late Show next summer after host openly criticised the settlement between Trump and parent company Paramount—though cites purely financial reasons
Sunday, 13 July 2025
9x9 (12. 578)
i’ll get no residuals ‘cause i’m a stateless individual: Trump considers revoking the citizenship of long time show-business foil Rosie O’Donnell
know thy selfie: from visibility and transformation to the routine, an examination of the custom that’s unlikely to loose currency
room 237: Stanley Kubric’s last minute change to the ending of The Shining
from the i sing the scooter electric department: China’s Omo X is a self-driving EV
turtle spiders of the sea: Ze Frank on the horseshoe crab
ebb and flow: an underwater turbine off the coast of Scotland demonstrates the viability of tidal energy
hyborean age: a Red Sonja remake in discussion thirty years in after numerous other reboots
a common-thread among world-eating types: a literally history of the billionaire—via Nag on the Lake
off-ramp: unmoved by other atrocities, MAGAist may view Trump’s connection with the sex-pest as a somewhat dignified way to sever connections with the movement
Sunday, 29 June 2025
8x8 (12. 561)
willis wonderland: an appreciation of an influential designer that defined the aesthetic of the 80s
Sunday, 15 June 2025
rewatch (12. 539)
catagories: ๐บ, The Simpsons
Wednesday, 4 June 2025
local on the the eights (12. 509)
Though hardly seeming retro to me being raised in an established tradition of a certain vintage of families who left the television on CNN Headline News, C-SPAN and The Weather Channel for ambiance, we got some nostalgic feelings over, via Waxy, the WeatherStar 4000 service developed by Matt Walsh (complete with a compliment of code to make your own project) as an attested weather watcher, cycling through the forecast with various statics from the almanac.
Giving up-to-date conditions and predictions with appropriate musical accompaniment of pop and smooth jazz, the site emulates the eponymous STAR (Satellite Transponder Addressable Receiver) proprietary technology, compiling data from the National Weather Service and Storm Prediction Centre, initially sold as an add-on for customised meteorological reports before being targeted to local markets—now drawing on NOAA (the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the acronym pronounced as ‘Noah’) only localised forecasts for the United States are available but an international version exists here.
Tuesday, 3 June 2025
turnabout intruder (12. 506)
Courtesy of our faithful chronicler we are reminded that on this day in 1969, the originally scheduled broadcast preempted more than two months due to special network coverage following the death of former president Dwight Eisenhower (see also here and here), the original run of Star Trek came to a rather ignominious end with its final episode (previously), two years short of its five year mission. Responding to a cry for help from an archaeological team on an Alpha Quadrant planet, (Captain’s log, Stardate 5928.5: The Enterprise has received a distress call from a group of scientists on Camus II, who are exploring the ruins of a dead civilisation. Their situation is desperate. Two of the survivors are the expedition’s surgeon, Dr Coleman and the leader of the expedition Dr Janice Lester) Kirk is reunited with a former romantic interest from his Academy days, the latter being attended by the former who claims that she is suffering from acute radiation poisoning which killed the others. Lester and Kirk reminisce about their shared time in training, Lester blaming Starfleet’s patriarchal culture and sexism for halting her career progression and activating an alien technology to Freaky Friday their life-entities and switch bodies, with Lester as Kirk taking command of the ship and remanding Kirk as Lester to sick bay. In a course of events that are a carefully constructed indictment against Lester’s ambitious takeover and a tribunal ensues to declare Lester unfit for command with the imposter Kirk pushing back against this mutiny. Eventually the crew realises that the captain is not himself and the two personalities are once again swapped with the alien artefact. Dismissive of Lester’s hysteria, the final lines of dialogue, spoken by Kirk restored in his own body are “Her life could have been as rich as any woman’s—if only… if only…” Poorly received by audiences and considered one of the worst episodes of the original series—though in fairness, the the show was cancelled prematurely and did not have the chance to complete its story arc as planned, critics found it to be misogynistic and playing into the prejudices and sexism that Dr Lester had sought to overcome.
the carpenters - space encounters (12. 506)
Airing in mid-May 1978, we are directed, courtesy of Poseidon’s Underworld to another questionable but fun project inspired by Star Wars mania (see also here and here) in this ABC television special featuring the brother and sister musical duo with guest stars Suzanne Somers, John Davidson and Charlie Callas, who are abducted by aliens and beamed up to the mothership’s nightclub (there’s a lot of crossing of franchises here) and perform a medley of their songs and other disco standards in order to help the extraterrestrials deemphasise their focus on technological advancement and embrace love and art. Check out the synopsis at the link above with production notes and more publicity stills from the show and enjoy the playlist below.
Sunday, 1 June 2025
6x6 (12. 502)
the chairs of dr who: the quest to identify as much seating as possible from the series’ first great age from 1963 to 1989—via Pasa Bon!

cowardcore: milquetoast Pride apparel collections—via Super Punch—see previously
the amalfi coast of japan: sites that compare themselves to more famous vacation destinations
all these worlds are yours, except europa—attempt no landing there; use them together, use them in peace: future missions to drill into the icy crust of the ocean moons—see previously
maxwell house: a fascinating omnibus of the cinematic commercial advertisements of Ridley Scott
catagories: ๐ฏ๐ต, ๐ณ️⚧️, ๐ณ️๐, ๐บ, ๐งฎ, ๐งณ, ๐ช, ๐️, Blade Runner