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Dear Reader,



Last week I was lucky enough to travel to Perugia, Italy, with hundreds of other journalism leaders for the annual International Journalism Festival. The conference is so special and unique, offering a space for colleagues from across the globe to gather in community to talk about the biggest challenges facing our field. We learn from leaders from all types of news organizations, and we leave feeling connected in our journey to inform communities. I was a part of two panels, one focused on the state of nonprofit news today, and the other a more informal conversation where we shared some of our leadership mistakes and how each one has shaped our management styles.


This week, I’m in Fort Worth, Texas, for a summit focused on local nonprofit news. Hosted by an industry leader and funder, American Journalism Project (AJP), AJPalooza gathers dozens of nonprofit news leaders, philanthropists and stakeholders for collaboration and conversations about the ecosystem and the moment. Each year, the gathering is held in a different hometown of the newsrooms in the AJP portfolio, giving us a chance to see the innovative ways that we serve the communities we cover. These opportunities allow us the space and time to channel the momentum and creativity that it takes to build new products and projects that better our industry and, more importantly, that help us better serve you.


We fight every day at The Marshall Project to bring more transparency to our justice system. We aim to produce work that helps make our system more fair and more just.

Right now, in our field, being a leader also requires a bit of radical hope.  


This work is always challenging. It’s often time-consuming. And sometimes it can feel isolating. But this month I have more hope because of the connections I’ve made with newsroom leaders who are unwavering in their commitment to a better news landscape for everyone. If there’s one thing these experiences make clear, it’s that by staying connected, curious and committed, we can lead through the instability and help create a future of news that reduces harm and fills needs.  


By reading our reporting, you’re a part of that future, too.



In community,

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Today's News:

Community Recs Post!

Apr. 23rd, 2026 11:10 am
glitteryv: (Default)
[personal profile] glitteryv posting in [community profile] recthething
Every Thursday, we have a community post, just like this one, where you can drop a rec or five in the comments.

This works great if you only have one rec and don't want to make a whole post for it, or if you don't have a DW account, or if you're shy. ;)

(But don't forget: you can deffo make posts of your own seven days a week. ;D!)

So what cool fanvids/fics/fanart/other kinds of fanworks/fancrafts/podfics have we discovered this week? Drop it in the comments below. Anon comment is enabled.

BTW, AI fanworks are not eligible for reccing at recthething. If you aware that a fanwork is AI-generated, please do not rec it here.
lilly_c: Mulder and Scully in Springfield (Mulder & Scully - Simpsons appearance)
[personal profile] lilly_c posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: caught me off guard
Fandom: The X-Files
Rating:
Content notes: Caps used are my own from season one, gem effect rainbow background is from a public domain image search, text is from Kaleidoscope by The Veronicas. Font used is (true love).
Artist notes: I’m now working in Pixelmator Pro on Mac and I'm still very much learning how to use it including any tips and tricks not included in Apple's documentation and I’m more used to working in Photoscape X.
Summary:

caught me off guard )

scabrous

Apr. 23rd, 2026 07:19 am
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
[personal profile] prettygoodword
scabrous (SKAB-ruhs) - adj., covered with scales or scabs; hence, very coarse or rough; hence, disgusting, repellent; hence, dealing with suggestive, indecent, or scandalous themes; difficult, thorny, troublesome.


I don't usually made explicit the chain of shifting meanings, but the line-up was too good to miss here. I didn't link the last sense because I'm not sure where it links. The root sense is, as you might hope, the first: Latin scaber, rough/scabby/scurfy, which we took up around 1580.

---L.

フォースと共にあれ

Apr. 23rd, 2026 11:26 pm
nnozomi: (Default)
[personal profile] nnozomi
Reading, or rather rereading: Peter Dickinson, In the Palace of the Khans. I think this was Dickinson’s last novel, or at any rate very, very late on in his career/his life, and in some ways it shows: the underlying themes that would have been woven seamlessly into the whole story in a peak-Dickinson book kind of lie uneasily on top, not really integrated and as a result not as emotionally effective as they might have been. That said, Dickinson is one of those creators who’s still better at 70% than most people are at 110%. The book is set in one of his imaginary but plausible countries, this one a small Central Asian state called Dirzhan, where Nigel, the teenage son of the British Ambassador, is summoned to help the President-Khan’s daughter Taeela perfect her English. Nigel is one of Dickinson’s viewpoint characters who is good in all senses, without coming off like a Mary Sue, and spending time in his head is deeply satisfying (although I’m kind of sorry that the constraints of the book made it impossible to get Taeela’s POV too). There are also a lot of interesting minor characters—Nigel’s mother Lucy (a whole unwritten novel in herself), Mizhael “Mike” the Oxford-educated chieftain’s son who makes his living designing video games, his brilliant, impatient Singaporean wife Lily-Jo, and so on. Working out the central puzzle of the palace map is one of my favorite parts of the book (almost nothing actually happens, but it’s just as exciting as any of the action sequences), and the symbolic gesture which closes the book and allows another long-awaited resolution is wonderful.

Listening to some of Alma Deutscher’s more recent stuff, the Breaking News Polka, which is very cute, and the Japanese Fantasia. I like that her work is so neoclassical, but I kind of wish she hadn’t taken this to the extent of using two of the most predictable Japanese traditional songs possible for her classical variations. (At least she didn't use "Kimigayo," which is as jingoistic as any other national anthem and more than some, although I do kind of like it musically.) I’ll admit that “Akatombo” is much more interesting in her hands than when I hear it signaling five o’clock (linking back to my other endeavor, it has lyrics by Miki Rofu, son of Midorikawa Kata, and music by Yamada Kosaku, brother of Tsuneko Gauntlett), but Clare Fischer did sakura sakura better. I’d just as soon have heard what Alma would do with something by Mr.Children or Dreams Come True.

Jiang Dunhao song of the post (because it’s my post and I can): 选择的归路, an older OST that I like for the way it shows off his low range and slides back and forth between minor and major; the first shift to major, around 00:35-36, is terrific.

We’re doing movie music in the orchestra right now (almost done, concert coming up this weekend, knock wood [knock woodwinds?]), and just in case not everybody was sure of what the Star Wars suite was expressing, one of the oboists sent everyone a heartfelt manifesto on the in-universe context of each section (the annihilating force of the Empire, Yoda lifting the shuttle out of the swamp, Luke feeling the Force, Leia summoning help and so on) just for reference. Nothing I haven’t known about since I was fifteen, and I do think about it when we’re playing; I find Yoda’s theme some of John Williams’ best work, the main theme with the little clarinet interjections in particular always kind of makes me cry, around 1:14 to 1:24 here; but I was pleased to find the oboist signing his email off appropriately with “May the Force be with you!” (If we’d only pushed the concert date off by just a week, it could’ve been on May the Fourth…)

New class of Japanese learners at the weird high school, a big one this year with eighteen kids. Mostly Chinese (including one from Hong Kong), as well as two lively Nepali boys and one girl each from Thailand and the Philippines. Last year’s class featured two tall, slim, incredibly poised idol-style princesses; this year they’re all more typical fifteen-year-olds, personalities not yet coming out in full at their new school, although it’s fascinating to watch the subgroups forming already. Several speak good English and have to be told NOT to speak English with me when I volunteer in class, they’re here to learn Japanese! They have so far learned to introduce themselves with regard to name, age, and nationality, the last a little complicated; the Thai and Filipina girls are both half-Japanese, I think, and so is at least one of the Chinese kids, and since they’re all still young enough to hold dual nationality, they have some choices to make when it comes to this elementary piece of language practice.

Work: Somewhere in one of the Janet Neel mysteries, Francesca Wilson remarks “Fraud gets in everywhere once you have it, like moth,” and I have found that this also applies to mismanagement/incompetence at work—like, there is this one long project in which everything that could go wrong has gone wrong (not, for a nice change, any of it my fault to speak of). I think the root of all evil was the client demanding extremely unrealistic deadlines, and then the sales guys promising to meet them without bothering to consult with the people actually doing the work (sorry, I have a long-standing and permanent grudge against the people in charge of sales), but even after that there was a remarkable failure to do any of the elementary checking (spelling! glossary words!), agree on basic conventions, or do anything resembling version control. Like wrestling a plate of spaghetti, but it’s not like the spaghetti fork hasn’t long since been invented.

A couple of very silly things from long ago that came to mind recently, one talking with the brass players at orchestra rehearsal: way back in high school I had a friend who was a trombonist in the band, and who would bring her instrument to school on the school bus, as one did. One of the little kids looked at her getting on the bus one day with this big black case over her shoulder, and called out “Hey, look! Sarah plays the bazooka!”
Also, since we’re into baseball season now (a mixed bag so far), I was reminded of Deanna Rubin’s baseball musical, which remains a delight. (I should look Deanna up again—we hung out a few times many years ago and she was lovely.)

This is just plain bragging and I’ll put it under a cut: in brief )

Photos: My bassoon teacher’s magnificent cat, trains within trains, Shanghai-style fried dumplings (apparently you can tell because they’re folded like little paper hats, and yes they were as tasty as they look), and assorted flowers.



Be safe and well.

A lovely sunny outing with tulips!

Apr. 23rd, 2026 03:11 pm
kazzy_cee: (3D glasses)
[personal profile] kazzy_cee
It has been a gloriously sunny day today with clear skies and a temperature of 20ºC/68ºF, which was perfect for an outing to a tulip festival about an hour's drive away.

Tulley's Tulip Fest runs for about three weeks each year and is a celebration of beautiful tulips. This week is the peak time to see them, and they have 1.5 million tulips with over 120 different varieties on show. It was lovely to enjoy them in the sunshine today.

This is one of two fields covered in rows and rows of gorgeous colour. Under the cut for giant tulips, floating tulips, windmills, butterflies and unicorns...
IMG_6874.jpeg
Read more... )

There were lots of opportunities to buy from vendors selling food, including Dutch specialities such as bitterballen, pancakes and stroopwaffles, but also lots of street food. We ended up having a delicious, freshly cooked wood-fired pizza for lunch before heading home.

Rainy Day and Story Notes

Apr. 23rd, 2026 09:34 am
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Thursday. Rainy and cool.

Today, I believe, is going to include a sizeable chunk of time in the Comfy Chair in my office, with a pen, a pad of paper and various notes. Which is to say -- working, today.

I will be baking a couple of chicken breasts, some of which will be for lunch today, the rest of which will be leftovers.

I have a note from the finance company assuring me that they are On The Case.

In all the Excitement attending the finance company shenanigans the other day, I forget the Biggest! News! Users of electricity have been being promised for months now that our electricity bills Will Be going down next year, and a couple days ago I got a letter from CMP, assuring me that this happy news is true!

In fact, my monthly electric bill will be doing down by!

Four dollars.

Y'all, I can't even buy a bottle of cheap wine for four bucks anymore.

I noted several people remarking on how small alpacas are, and indeed they are much shorter than their cousin, the llama. Breed standard calls for a compact animal, and one of yesterday's companions of the road -- Obadiah -- is considered Too Tall, and for that defect, he will never know the joys of alpaca fatherhood.

All that said -- I'm no longer six foot tall, but I'm still way taller than the so-called "average" American woman at five-foot-three-anna-half feet. Cory, who is closer to the average, but not what I would call short, had to reach UP to fasten Zander's lead, and had to Speak Sternly to Obie, when he casually lifted his head, putting his nose beyond her reach, when she was trying to fasten the lead.

So -- alpacas are compact, yes -- but they're not small. I would not, for instance, have wanted Zander to step on my foot.

Oh! And another question -- this regarding the cat balls -- Do the cats like them? Yes! In fact, these are the culmination of Quest to replace the two (similar) cat balls that he carried around with him and brought to me to throw for him, and, indeed, brought to his grandpa Trooper, to show him what a ball was. The original balls are doubtless in a safe place, because they are Treasure, but Rookie doesn't really get the springs, though he'll compete with Tali, because -- Competition R Rook -- and none of the other balls in the house are quite so perfect as those which have been banked.

So! All questions now being answered: What're your plans for the day?


james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
p+B11 is aneutronic (although the side-reactions aren't) and B11 is comparatively abundant in the Earth's crust.

A novel approach to proton-boron 11 fusion.

Use of Weapons by Iain M. Banks

Apr. 23rd, 2026 08:46 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


What transformed Cheradenine Zakalwe into the superlative Special Circumstances asset he is today?

Use of Weapons by Iain M. Banks
darkjediqueen: (Default)
[personal profile] darkjediqueen posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: New Games
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: No Warnings Apply
Fandom: Heated Rivalry
Relationships: Ilya Rozanov/Shane Hollander
Tags: Established Relationship, Post Season One
Summary: New games were allowed between them now.
Word Count: 1,004

New Games )

side-effect of shuffling playlists

Apr. 23rd, 2026 01:15 pm
wychwood: Vala decrees that you may speak (SG-1 - Vala goddess)
[personal profile] wychwood

So basically these are all the same song, right:

What else am I missing that goes on this list? And are there any equivalents about boyfriends? The only thing that came to mind was the Dandy Warhols - Bohemian Like You, which isn't quite the same vibe.

badly_knitted: (B5)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks

Title: Facing The Future
Fandom: Babylon 5
Author: [personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: John Sheridan.
Rating: PG
Word Count: 300
Spoilers/Setting: Rising Star.
Summary: As the new President of the Alliance, Sheridan will have his work cut out for him.
Content Notes: None needed.
Written For: Challenge 513: Amnesty 85, using Challenge 485: Face.
Disclaimer: I don’t own Babylon 5, or the characters. They belong to J. Michael Straczynski.




As ICE recedes from Minnesota

Apr. 23rd, 2026 10:42 am
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