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Cake day: June 10th, 2025

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  • I don’t want to diminish the tragedy, but… this reminds me of a joke I first heard told by Garrison Keillor, but it was already old when he told it. Here’s a link to one version: https://www.maxtrescott.com/max_trescott_on_general_a/2011/02/aviation-joke-hunting-for-moose-in-alaska.html

    The following is a joke – not real – the NBC story is real, but the following is NOT:

    Two hunters hire an Alaskan bush pilot to flythem in his float plane out into the Alaskan wilderness for a week long moose hunt. After landing on a lake and dropping them off with all their gear, he reminds them of of the terms, saying, “I’ll be back in a week to pick you up but you can only have one moose between you. The airplane’s not big enough to carry any more than that.” The hunters agree and head out as the pilot flies off.

    A week later he returns to find the hunters waiting with their gear and a wealth of meat including two whole moose heads complete from racks to delap to neck. The pilot is furious. He shuts down and jumps out of the plane. “You idiots, I told you one moose. Now we’re going to have to leave the other here to rot. What were you thinking?”

    One of the hunters replies, “Last year we paid the our an extra $500 and he flew us out.”

    The pilot refuses, “It’s not the money, it’s the weight!”

    “Well that’s B.S.,” says a hunter, “Cuz’ our pilot last year had the same type of plane as you and he took off just fine.”

    After much back and forth, the pilot relents. They load up all their gear, strap one head to each wing and the pilot fires up the plane to takeoff. The aircraft hops and skips on the water, lifts off and stays in ground effect until the last possible moment. The pilot pulls up, clearing the trees at the end of the lake by inches. The aircraft climbs out slowly but not high enough to get over the low, forrested hills and they crash in a tumble of spruce.

    Everyone survived with minor injuries, but the pilot was knocked unconscious in the crash. He was attended by one of the hunters. As he came to, and, as so often is the case, he asked “where are we?” The hunter looked toward the crash and then back to the lake. ”I’m not absolutely sure,” he said, “but it looks as if you got us about a quarter mile further than our pilot did last year."




  • Gomez further criticized the FCC for overstepping its authority in “intervening in employment matters reserved for other government entities with proper jurisdiction on these issues” by requiring Skydance commitments to not establish any DEI programs, which Carr derided as “invidious.” But Gomez countered that “this agency is undermining legitimate efforts to combat discrimination and expand opportunity” by meddling in private companies’ employment decisions.

    That’s Fascism!

    You can argue that requiring equal opportunity programs were also government overreach, but even a cursory look at the history of those programs shows they were done to combat a deep history of racism combined with the statistics and figures proving discrepencies. Equal opportunity programs were publicly debated and approved to solve a problem. This is being done without review or evidence at the whim of the administration.











  • Kinda liking Revival. Started Sandman S2, but only watching 1 per week with friend.

    Finished Dying for Sex. It was ok, but I kept getting distracted by thoughts like, “I bet this was uglier in real life.” Of course, we probably want our media to be more fun and exciting than real life, but it is rare that I’m disrtacted by the … ‘cleanliness?’ of a show.

    side note: I did NOT like Interior Chinatown. I enjoyed the first couple episodes, but then it dragged, and I found the ending completely unsatisfying, with big holes left unfilled.

    Debating if I should rewatch S1 of Peasemaker before starting S2.




  • Per that definition:

    Vacuum tubes (thermionic valves) were the first active electronic components… and by the 1920s, commercial radio broadcasting and telecommunications were becoming widespread and electronic amplifiers were being used in such diverse applications as long-distance telephony and the music recording industry.

    So tubes are in! Old lamps are OUT!