Already a somewhat notorious and reviled Swedish-style liqueur called bรคsk, bitter and flavoured with wormwood and anise—Sweden being one of the few countries that never banned absinthe—a bartender is leaning into its noxious reputation with the Chicago distillery Jeppson (Bรคska droppar is the most popular domestic label, drunk as a digestif), which imported the blend from the home country in the 1920s, first sold door-to-door as a medicine to bypass Prohibition restrictions. Pure described as tasting like “heartbreak and pencil-shavings” and previously offered as a boilermaker and during the emergence of the last brood, with an infusion of seventeen-year cicadas—no one asked for this—the latest concoction calls for a wash of truffle and sesame oil, chilli peppers, briny cuttlefish ink soaked in tobacco—specifically Newports. More about its reception—“grandma’s furniture from when she still smoked”—at the link above.
Thursday, 18 July 2024
evil malรถrt (11. 701)
skynet (11. 700)
With the snowclone of a slogan “Make America First in AI” that appropriately spells out “mafia,” as I originally only suspected that Silicon Valley’s recent rally behind Trump was mostly an attempt to revitalise cryptocurrencies as a legitimate and safe store of wealth for tumultuous times, Trump’s draft executive order to eliminate burdensome regulations on development of artificial intelligence technology and military applications—described as a new “Manhattan Project” and scuttling ethical and safety-testing requirements for autonomous weapons—to ensure US dominance in the field is a worrying shift in policy. While the capabilities of AI as they currently stand are far from proven, the potential for a robot holocaust was not my first pick as existential threat that a second term would pose for the world, leaning towards either a cascading environmental collapse, a re-polarised geopolitical landscape or American irrelevance and dictatorship first and foremost. Furthermore, Trump’s vice-presidential pick as a former venture capitalist has the same mindset as the tech utopianists and accelerationists and is a vocal opponent of government interference, which if the technology realises its potential, would be wholly ungovernable.
synchronoptica
one year ago: Trump under to investigation (with synchronoptica)
nine years ago: typewriter...tip, tip, tip
eleven years ago: bad banks
twelve years ago: baubles and market bubbles
thirteen years ago: a mosquito-plagued campsite
Wednesday, 17 July 2024
amusing ourselves to death (11. 699)
Using the 1985 bestseller by educator Neil Postman, which draws on the dichotomy of the dystopian futures envisioned by George Orwell in 1984 and Aldous Huxley in Brave New World with the public stripped of rights by totalitarian governments in the narrative of the former and people voluntarily self-medicating and foregoing their liberties in an induced and voluntary state of blissful ignorance in the

“Now … this” is commonly used on radio and television newscasts to indicate that what one has just heard or seen has no relevance to what one is about to hear or see, or possibly to anything one is ever likely to hear or see. The phrase is a means of acknowledging the fact that the world as mapped by the speeded-up electronic media has no order or meaning and is not to be taken seriously. There is no murder so brutal, no earthquake so devastating, no political blunder so costly—for that matter, no ball score so tantalising or weather report so threatening—that it cannot be erased from our minds by a newscaster saying, “Now … this.” The newscaster means that you have thought long enough on the previous matter (approximately forty-five seconds), that you must not be morbidly preoccupied with it (let us say, for ninety seconds), and that you must now give your attention to another fragment of news or a commercial.
Much more at the links above.
the unchained goddess (11. 698)

synchronoptica
one year ago: photos of the Anthropocene (with synchronoptica) plus a continued blockade on Ukrainian grain shipments
seven years ago: swimsuit models, Voltaire’s science-fiction, the premiere of SpongeBob plus the Golden Submarine
nine years ago: assorted links to revisit plus Merkel’s immigration policies under scrutiny
twelve years ago: climate change and too much water plus a branded look for US Commanders in Chief
fourteen years ago: a trip to the Baltic coast
Tuesday, 16 July 2024
only the lonely (11. 697)
A part-talkie (with mixed audio-dialogue, sound-effects and score plus intertitles), Public Domain Review presents Paul Fejลs’ 1928 Lonesome, exploring the subject through following the lives of two working-class New York City urbanites apart and together over the course of a single July day, the telephone operator and factory worker get a break from their drudgery, met and have a splendid time at a funfair but are separated by a sudden downpour and regret loosing each other only to later discover that they’ve been neighbours in the same apartment block all along. The featurette, considered a masterpiece, has the narrative of an O Henry story and many innovations in terms of cinematography including fast-motion, superimposition, split screens and a roller-coaster mounted camera.
⚶ (11. 696)
Observed between 1802 and 1807 before being identified as a minor planet by astronomer Heinrich Olbers, whom having already discovered and named what is now understood to be the asteroid Pallas gave the honours to mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss, whose orbital calculations had enabled researchers to confirm the existence of the first such object in that region of the solar system, Ceres, presumed—incorrectly—to be fragments of a larger, destroyed planet, and called the discovery after the Roman goddess of hearth and home, Vesta. The Dawn mission, dispatched to explore the asteroid belt, entered into a year-long orbit around the brightest and second-largest asteroid on this day in 2011. Presently represented by the modern astrological variant of the original symbol conceived by Gauss, it was suggestive of the altar of the goddess and home-fire by extension, the first form is scheduled to return as a Unicode character, the pictorial representations repopularised following their retirement in the mid-1800s as impractical as the cosmic backyard became more crowded with eight major planets and over a dozen minor ones. During the interim until the 1950s, asteroids were given the naming convention of ordinal numbers, according to the sequence of their discovery, this one called ④ Vesta.

synchronoptica
one year ago: professional uniforms (with synchronoptica), an experimental overland train plus the Trinity nuclear test (1945)
seven years ago: a linguistic curiosity
eight years ago: a beach on the รle d’Orรฉlon
nine years ago: classes of quarks plus a Mad, Mad, Mad Max mashup
eleven years ago: informant gadgets
Monday, 15 July 2024
trump-vance (11. 695)
Author and jurist turned politician and once among the ex-president’s staunchest and vocal critics, a Never-Trumper, within the party since transformed into an apologist for some of Trump’s most authoritarian aspirations and cheerleader for his style of populism, Ohio senator JD Vance was picked as Trump’s running mate, announced during the first night of the Republican National Conference held in Milwaukee, less than forty-eight hours after the assassination attempt on the GOP presumptive candidate. Vance blamed the political violence on the rhetoric of Biden and “legacy” media who characterise Trump as a dangerous autocrat that threatens democracy. Vance’s platform is aligned lock-step with Trump’s, and arguably the world-vision of this political heir and protege might be a darker one.
9x9 (11. 694)
fungal magic: an update on the mushroom documentary narrated by Bjรถrk
always lands on its feet: the myriad ways animals negotiate the laws of physics—see also
meisje met de parel: decoding Vermeer’s true colours—see previously—via Miss Cellania
i’m your heat pump: a seductive slow jam seems to educate the public on the thermal energy transmission system
eno: the generative documentary on the self-described non-musician that changes with each viewing
legal daisy spacing: a purported 1985 manual for terraforming a planet that presents a warped bureaucracy and sterile landscaping
nolle prosequi: federal judge overseeing illegal retention of classified documents trial against Trump dismissed the indictment over the improper appointment of the prosecution’s special counsel—see previously here and here
reimann hypothesis: new insights about the distribution of prime numbers—via Damn Interesting’s Curated Links
krรคuterbuch: Johannes Hartlieb’s fifteenth century treasury of herbs
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links worth revisiting (with synchronoptica), Netscape plus the Rosetta Stone
seven years ago: dark matter, more on the election integrity commission plus the bicentennial of Frankenstein
nine years ago: thalassocracies, plutographies plus more links to enjoy
eleven years ago: a slightly NSFW Soviet adult literacy reader
twelve years ago: the German banking system plus the Oberammergau Passion Plays