The Atlantic features a short documentary from Ben Garfield on the self-proclaimed saviour to Russian turophiles named Oleg Sirota, a former IT professional who realised his true-calling once trade embargos were enacted on all sides in response to the annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the importation of European cheese was banned.
While I’m pretty sure that this is very much against the spirit of the legal protections extended to geographically distinct food products, Sirota is supplying otherwise unavailable varieties of Italian, French and English cheeses from his factory, the profile does present some interesting questions on patriotism, nativism and opportunism. Cheese is an especially interesting item to “traffic” because of its cultural resonance and attachment to a specific location and given the fact that for a perishable item, it is pretty portable and was among one of the first food traditions that people exported.
Tuesday, 23 January 2018
import/export or war and cheese
7x7
fungus among us: spore- and nutrient-infused concrete could create self-healing structures
his master’s voice: speech-recognition-based surveillance poses concern for digital assistants
vermicular control: a consideration of the in-house espionage network of the once largest residential complex in Europe, Moscow’s House on the Embankment
power to the polls: a selection of creative and powerful protest signs from the 2018 Women’s March
ugly duckling: a bevy of robot swans have been deployed in Singapore to monitor water quality
comfy cosy are we: an inviting cinema in Japan recreates the experience of watching a movie curled up in bed
diffraction: still life photographs of food distorted by water and glass
catagories: ⛓️๐ฅ, ๐, ๐ฌ, ๐ก, ๐ฅธ, architecture, environment
Monday, 22 January 2018
domino effect

parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme
catagories: ๐ฑ, food and drink
malocchio
Via the always brilliant Nag on the Lake, we are referred to The Awl—for what may sadly be one of the last times with the property’s announcement that it will cease publication at the end of this month—for another lesson on colours with a non-specific hue called haint blue.
catagories: ๐, myth and monsters
Sunday, 21 January 2018
operation chrome dome
Fifty years ago today, a nuclear-armed B-52 stratofortress bomber was flying an alert mission over Greenland (well after America’s overtures to purchase the world’s largest island) and experienced a cabin fire that prompted six out of seven crew members to safely jettison and abandon the aircraft and its payload of four hydrogen bombs before it could reach the landing field at Thule.
The craft went down in the icy North Star Bay and the ensuing explosion of the fuselage and the conventional munitions on board caused the nuclear shells to rupture and contaminate the wider Bay of Baffin. The US and Denmark launched a massive containment and recovery effort that cost the equivalent of a billion dollars and one warhead was never recovered and the country’s tacit support of the deterrence exercises that kept twelve of such bombers aloft at all times (the US Strategic Air Command’s Chrome Dome) on the periphery of Soviet airspace was in direct violation of Denmark’s official anti-nuclear stance. Responders worked quickly to remove radioactive ice before the summer thaw that would have caused an even larger area to be impacted and hauled away tonnes of ice and debris during the extreme arctic winter in what was deemed officially Project Crested Ice (our faithful chronicler Doctor Caligari links to some news reel footage) but referred to by workers—many of whom later suffered radiation sickness—as Dr Freezelove in homage to the 1964 Stanley Kubrick release.
catagories: ⚛️, ๐ฌ๐ฑ, environment, ⓦ