Reheated (124)
Because some things do bear repeating, a few items from the archives:
On Calvin and Hobbes – and progressive journalists who find it “problematic.”
By which I mean, it was once possible to stumble across lengthy articles on niche pop-culture subjects, often written with an affectionate expertise. Now, however, it’s difficult to differentiate one contributor from another. The content doesn’t read as if anyone in particular wrote it. It’s flavourless, uniform in its politics and ideological assumptions – both pointedly announced – and uniform in its tone. It might as well be generated by an algorithm.
I suppose that’s what makes the Calvin and Hobbes article grimly funny, in a disappointing modernity kind of way. If you poke through Mr Shayo’s other, numerous contributions, the tone, such as it is, is much the same. There’s no obvious personality – no sense of any particular person having written it – no sense of mischief, and no discernible wit. Mr Shayo is, however, capable of making entirely contradictory claims, on the very same subject, mere days apart.
For instance, in the article quoted above, Mr Shayo worries that the absence of smartphones and GPS tracking devices may be “baffling for young readers,” and he bemoans how the strip “doesn’t have any modern technology.” And yet we’re told – days later – that, “the lack of technological influence makes the strip read as a timeless work.” “It always feels that it’s something that could still happen today… the absence of technology is hardly notable.”
Likewise, Mr Shayo insists that “ending Calvin and Hobbes is exactly what saved it,” and praises the strip’s creator, Bill Watterson, for refusing to license spin-offs, adaptations, and potentially lucrative merchandise, thereby “living up to the ideals that the strip… championed.” “Ending the strip,” we’re told, “was a good decision” and “there is no reason to tarnish that legacy by adding more to an already concluded work.”
While, one week earlier, “Calvin and Hobbes needs to be an animated show.” Because “an adaptation or continuation is essential.”
Let’s Do It, But In A Way That’s Less Likely To Work.
In which we poke through the Parenting pages of the Guardian.
Providing the sperm. A joyous and maternal turn of phrase.
Also of note, the idea of wanting a baby, but with only a third or a quarter of the responsibility. A kind of low-commitment parenting.
Bodes well.
Readers are invited to ponder the appeal, for any gentleman with fatherhood in mind, of effectively becoming a sperm donor who is also expected to perform household chores, for many years, and to pay child maintenance. In a sexless relationship with random lesbians who may find him barely tolerable, a necessary complication.
But this, it seems, is how one “redefines the family unit completely.” It’s “the ideal parenting setup.”
Cross-dressing man issues orders to women.
On the non-random nature of who you are.
The newborn me was a result of a particular lineage, of choices made by specific individuals and the genes of those individuals – who can of course say the same thing about themselves. To imply that anyone’s birth is a random thing, as if it could have happened anywhere, at any time, as if the particulars were immaterial, is, it seems to me, a little odd. Indeed, arse-backwards.
And I doubt that many parents see the birth of their child as some random occurrence, unmoored from any context or preceding events. I’d imagine it wouldn’t seem random at all.
Unless you imagine a queue of souls waiting to spawn in some small but arbitrary body on a continent chosen by the spin of a wheel. Or cosmic bingo balls.
For those craving more, this is a pretty good place to start.
Consider this an open thread. Share ye links and bicker.
Oh, and a reminder that this rickety barge is kept afloat by the buttons below.





Because actual adults sat in a commissioning meeting, said it out loud, and nobody, not even the most conservative person there, had the self-respect to laugh.
To be fair, I could see such a scheme figuring in the plot of an Agatha Christie mystery.
But what if your “whole” self, is, frankly, aggravating?
I’m just glad some of you remember these things.
We should have regular tests.
Who doesn’t love a nice, long, very detailed test?
I don’t know who needs to hear this, but I bet someone does…
Key Upcoming Dates (April–November 2026)
• April 7, 2026 — Georgia special runoff elections (e.g., for U.S. House CD 14 and some state legislative seats if needed). Also, Wisconsin Supreme Court election.
• April 16, 2026 — New Jersey’s 11th Congressional District special election (to fill a vacancy).
• April 21, 2026 — Virginia special election on a redistricting ballot measure (constitutional amendment related to congressional maps).
• May 5, 2026 — Primaries in Indiana and Ohio (plus possible state legislative specials, e.g., in Michigan Senate).
• May 12, 2026 — Primaries in Nebraska and West Virginia.
• May 16, 2026 — Louisiana primary.
• May 19, 2026 — Primaries in Alabama, Georgia (your state), Idaho, Kentucky, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. Georgia’s primary also includes some special elections.
• June 2, 2026 — Primaries in California, Iowa, Montana, New Mexico, New Jersey, and South Dakota (California may also have a special U.S. House election around this time).
• June 9, 2026 — Primaries in Maine, Nevada, North Dakota, and South Carolina.
• June 16–30, 2026 — More primaries and possible runoffs (e.g., DC on June 16, Maryland/New York/Utah on June 23, Colorado on June 30; Oklahoma primary June 16 with possible August runoff).
• July–August 2026 — Additional primaries (e.g., Arizona July 21; various states in early-mid August like Alaska, Florida, Michigan, Minnesota, Tennessee, Virginia, Washington).
• August 4, 2026 — Possible special U.S. House election in California (and primaries in Kansas, Missouri, Virginia, Washington).
• September 2026 — Final primaries (e.g., Delaware Sept 15, New Hampshire/Rhode Island Sept 8, Massachusetts Sept 1).
Who doesn’t love a nice, long, very detailed test?
Please let him win.
Woodchippers, they’re not just for paedos anymore.
Pride, baby.
Musical interlude.
Morning, Di.
In the comments to this video, they’re wondering how the fellow managed to train his voice thus, but I’m pretty sure that ~200 years ago he would have not acquired this voice but rather retained it from his boyhood.
If you catch my meaning…
Morning David.
And good night. It’s 02:20 hereabouts.
It’s pleasing and just a tad uncanny.
How can you say such a cruel thing about aspiring rappers and future ass-tro-nots? And just when they’re “turning their lives around”?
For any who haven’t notice yet, @dicentra posts lots of good stuff on her Twitter/X account.
Albums you didn’t know you needed.
Finnish word for David’s drinking habits?
A day ending in Y.
Some awful AWFLs are at it again.
I’d think a woodchipper would accelerate the process quite thoroughly.
Got to say, I am tempted by the Karl Malden album.
You’ll pay for that, Muldoon.
This bodes ill.
Pretty much everything about the man does.
Why am I seeing so much pride crap lately? I thought that pride month was in June?
Or from visiting this fine establishment.
What do you think the bar towels are for?
[ Shows Aelf how to wrap towel around head. ]
Hey, if it’s good enough for the witches.
McGonagall as a big booty blonde…
Not sorry.
Elderly gay Teacher murdered….
They really haven’t thought it through.
“I could not tolerate that”: Theater kids did not recognize actress.
Well, they do say that actors rank high in narcissism.
I can’t imagine wanting to be recognised by strangers. Sounds like a recipe for being endlessly self-conscious.
Which is why your business cards say “International Man of Mystery”.
“I literally don’t know where to even start with The Green Party.”
Future historians will need to be expert in clinical psychology.
Props to the kid in the beret.
Clinical psychology again:
“a darling of New York’s intellectual elite”
A well-developed sense of irony will suffice.
High in neuroticism, low in conscientiousness. The latter would, I think, explain the remarkable tolerance of internal contradiction. And of ludicrousness.
Admitting you have a problem doesn’t mean you’re going to do anything about it.
I see the x post I embedded has disappeared, which is a shame as the demographic profile was quite striking – and very much in keeping with my own impression. And it would go some way to explaining the jarring contradictions – the bag of incompatible nonsenses that is the Green Party.
Found one of the charts.
Lots of link rot. We all should post more screen shots with our links.
There seems to be some inconsistency in the color coding, though.
ALSO: Has anyone seen similar charts on political orientation vs. Dark Triad/Dark Tetrad and Cluster B?
Flatterer!
I’ve been drawn in by the Japan/USA crossover posts. The algo put me in touch with tons of plant lovers, and let me tell you, the Japanese are really fastidious about going out into the woods to photograph tiny, rare species and then identify them precisely. Lots of endemic species I’ve never seen before, including this ludicrous specimen that sprouts its flowers and fruits in the middle of its leaves.
There are other ridiculously fiddly crafts these people are involved in. Lots of literal “Hello world,” posts, saying, “Hey if these are getting translated and posted across the globe, here’s this stuff I make….”
Plus posts requesting cat photos: x.com/omochi_nam01/status/2039847115514650905
And the realization that a week isn’t long enough to experience Texas:
x.com/5ducks5/status/2039836340590973385
Chafes my cheeks, it does. As my dear grey-haired grandma used to say.
Cheers bruvvaaaa…
https://youtube.com/shorts/h489mc2eXQE?si=0God1KigyDvmr8n_
https://x.com/DaveAtherton20/status/2039984547014574581?s=20
Well we’re movin’ on up . . .
A data point on a downward trajectory?
Thomas Sowell taught there for just one academic year. As I recall, he was very dissatisfied with Howard’s commitment to academic excellence. (Can anyone confirm or correct that? I don’t have time right now to look in his books.)
But we will keep whistling past the graveyard because “conservatives” understand that these things just have ways of taking care of themselves.
https://www.city-journal.org/article/democratic-socialists-of-america-george-soros-local-elections
Easter message for King Charles.
In a parallel universe, we have a Queen Anne. Which strikes me as a better option.
Which reminded me of this.