The benefit concert—also called SARStock—held on this day in 2003 in order to prove that the city was a safe venue and rehabilitate its reputation and economy following a zoonotic Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome outbreak earlier in the year, and attended by an estimated half-a-million ticketed audience members, was the largest show in Canada and one of the largest in North America. Headlined by the Rolling Stones, who announced the concert while the area was still under lockdown from the World Health Organisation, acts included sets from Dan Aykroyd and James Belushi, The Flaming Lips, The Isley Brothers, AC/DC, Rush, The Guess Who and Justin Timberlake.
Sunday, 30 July 2023
molson canadian rocks for toronto (10. 916)
9x9 (10. 915)
polly pocket: following the success of Barbie, all the Mattel branded toys promised their own feature films
freshmen fifteen: a nifty conversion tool in the style of Neal.Fun—via Pasa Bon!

a sunday in the park with georges: the pointillist work by Seurat recreated in Wisconsin—see previously
eimreiรฐin: what became of trains in Iceland
you gotta pay your dues if you wanna sing the blues: we appreciated this reminiscence about the Ringo Starr tune
meteorological optical phenomenon: more on the Sun’s green flash as it disappears from the horizon
seybold seminars: the outsized influence of desktop publishing conferences—see also
return to tender: another exquisite John and Faith Hubley short courtsey of Fancy Notions
chick tracts (10. 914)
99% Invisible turns our attention to a strange and virulent form of evangelising in the form of an oddly collectible and exhaustive series of Christian comics from erstwhile cartoonist and Born-Again Jack Thomas Chick. First published in the 1960s from its headquarters in Rancho Cucamonga, California and continuing through to today, this pocket-sized artefact of conservative mainstream Protestant theology that’s become a self-parody veered at times to hate-speech and attacked Catholics, Masons, queer-people, socialists, Communists, drug-users, trick-or-treaters (collect them all!) and denounced non-conformists and non-Christian faiths as devil-worshipping as well as stoking ugly conspiracy theories and paranoia. The back-panel of each tract includes a blank spaces for churches to stamp their name and contact information as well as a bespoke salvation prayer for sinners to recant their ways. More at the links above.
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links to revisit
two years ago: the Norse goddess Freyja plus recreating classic screen-savers
three years ago: the microcars of Robert Hannoyer, pioneering oceanographer Marie Tharp, special edition Canadian coins, fashion designer Kansai Yamamoto (RIP), St Hatebrand plus the rich tradition of Japanese souvenirs
four years ago: algorithmically-directed decisions and the architecture of choice, disruptive jewellery plus non-overlapping magisteria
five years ago: Outsider Art from Austria, BBC’s sound archives plus building a Martian base in situ
Saturday, 29 July 2023
you will always have the poor among you, but you will not always have me (10. 913)
Fรชted on this day along with her siblings Lazarus and and Mary (often conflated with Mary Magdalene), Martha of Bethany, patron saint of hospitality workers, domestics and try-hards, is characterised in the Book of Luke as being conscientiously preoccupied with the task of hosting Jesus when he came for a visit.

synchronoptica
Friday, 28 July 2023
7x7 (10. 912)
barbieworld: a survey of a thousand advertisements contextualises the box-office phenomenon—see also
gigo: a fundamental law of computing will ultimately thwart digital dictatorships

chamber music: a poorly received Baroque Beatles Book from 1965
i want to do whatever common people people do: a new genre was born in the sixteenth century when Pieter Bruegel began specialising in peasants, merchants and mongers
word vectors: a bit of demystifying for Large Language Models—via Waxy
a census-designated place: explore Oppenheimer’s secret city of Los Alamos
vinnie ream (10. 911)
On this day, aged 18, in 1866 Lavina Ellen Ream Hoxie became the youngest and first female sculptor to receive a commission by the US government for her most famous and celebrated work, the statue of Abraham Lincoln (see also here and here) in the Capitol rotunda. Ream also sculpted the bronze of Cherokee inventor Sequoyah (the town of Vinita, Oklahoma in Statuary Hall and the monument of David Farragut in Washington DC’s Farragut Square. Although her selection by the House of Congress to render a life-sized marble of the president had already generated some controversy over her experience and false accusations by some factions that she was a “lobbyist”—the term at the time referring to a public woman of ill-repute and Ream took the slander and attacks in stride, it was mild compared to the scapegoating and unrelenting attacks to come. Whilst working on Lincoln in a basement studio of the Capitol, the impeachment proceedings of Andrew Johnson were taking place in the chambers above. Failing to secure a conviction that would have removed Johnson from office, by a single vote, radical elements of the Republican Party sought out someone to blame other than their own members and deflect from the bribery that was actually the motivating factor. It was discovered that the Kansas senator, Edmund G Ross, who cast the decisive vote to acquit was staying in a DC boarding house owned by Ream’s father during the trial, and it was suggested that Ream, notably absent from the family lodging operation and busy with her work, had somehow influenced Ross’ vote in order to vouchsafe her commission and preserve the legacy of Lincoln through saving his predecessor. The House passed a resolution to turn the studio space into a guardroom and nearly ejected Ream and her unfinished statue from the Capitol. The press and the art community aired their outrage at this petty retaliation and Congress eventually reversed the decision. Ream went on to open studios in New York and Washington after studying in Europe and producing busts of continental celebrities including Franz Liszt and Gustave Dorรฉ, her career essentially ending after her marriage at twenty-four as it was considered unseemly for a married woman to earn an income.
one year ago: Eilean Donan plus Castle Linlithgow
two years ago: your daily demon: Bunรฉ, assorted links to revisit, a silly super villain plus a Czech space opera
three years ago: artist Lรฉon Spilliaert, cartooning the US constitution, assorted links worth the revisit plus moving forward with fusion technology
four years ago: more links to check out, a food writer and former pirate plus growing one’s own victory garden
Thursday, 27 July 2023
fiรจvre jรฉrusalemienne (10. 910)
Partnering with Big Think, Atlas Obscura invites us on a tour world cities with their own signature psychological disorders. Beginning with the more familiar Stockholm Syndrome—astonishingly with the namesakes of London and Lima also falling into the hostage category—most others, like the Jerusalem Syndrome and Paris Syndrome fall into less dicey albeit overwhelming and traumatic bracket of tourists’ built-up expectations and attendant maladies under the general term Stendhal syndrome and named for the author’s account of psychosomatic reactions during a 1817 visit to Florence, the former sometimes manifesting in delusions that the travel is a character from the Holy Books so as not to fall short of expectations and preserve one’s anticipation when reality fails to deliver.
๐ (10. 909)

one year ago: the lochs of Scotland plus assorted links to revisit
two years ago: Stevie Nicks’ solo debut (1981), network bumpers, previously unpublished pictures of David Bowie, beckoning cats, more on the inconsistencies of the English language, Avant Garde magazine plus AI generated Tarot cards
three years ago: one of the fourteen Holy Helpers, a iconic cartoon introduction (1940), a growing collection of non-words plus the GIFs of Katy Daft
four years ago: a funeral for a glacier, bee habitats on bus shelters, more on data breaches and lax consequences for compromising personal information plus more vexing vexillology
five years ago: Madonna Madonna, coral bleaching, a commemorative bee coin plus mapping climate change in Europe
catagories: ⚒, ๐ฎ๐ณ, ๐ , ๐, architecture