On Friday, I am giving a webinar on personal archiving. It's free and open to anyone. (You can register here.) Even if you can't attend live, you should watch the recording once it's ready.
This webinar sprung out of a workshop a professor asked me to teach this past spring semester. Her course focused on global archives but she wanted her students to take away the lesson that they are the archivists of their own lives. That's where I came in.
I talked about the nitty gritty of what to save, why to save it, and how to save it. I also talked about things of particular interest to our specific group of students. The workshop ended with a ton of great questions and I knew this was something that I needed to share outside of that one classroom.
Thus, the webinar was born. I tweaked it based on the questions I received. There is so much advanced content I want to cover that I am considering making a second part to get to it all. (Who wants to dive into metadata with me?)
But you should all come to the first one! (Or at least watch the webinar.) Things don't get saved in libraries or museums unless individuals save the material first. Your history does not have to be famous to be important. Family recipes are worth saving. Family stories are you worth saving. Kids drawings are worth saving. Yearbooks are worth saving. Letters are worth saving. Your Instagram presence is worth saving! The webinar is going to cover it all - the physical and the digital. Plus, I'll share ways you can do it on the cheap.
If you take nothing else away from this, I just want you all to remember to BACKUP ALL YOUR PICTURES THAT ARE ON YOUR PHONE!
I picked Egg Drop Dead by Vivien Chien. It is the fifth title in the Noodle Shop mystery series. As is common in these cozy mysteries, the murder has occurred "off-screen" and our heroine is now on the case. For me, these books are more about character and less about the mystery itself. I'm only a few chapters in but there has already been some narrative development to our usual cast. It will be fun to see how this all pans out.
I must admit, I hate how the author has to do some info dumpy stuff at the beginning of every book. I get that this is for casual readers who are picking up books in the series at random but, as a regular reader, I hate have to wade through those paragraphs.
Long Read: The FBI and DOJ's slow building of the January 6th case. [WaPo - gift link]
I support content warnings but they probably don't work. [Parenting Translator]
Where is Apple going with this? [PetaPixel]
How age data explains our current politics. [WaPo - gift link]
Pigment, power, and history. [Atlas Obscura]
The scramble to stay employed when laid off on an H1B visa. [Planet Money]
Pride and Prejudice is a book about finding a house. [Hot and Bothered]
We need to harvest the power of poop. [Gastropod]
The glorification of motherhood, welfare, and racism - it all goes together. [Throughline]
The boogeymen of affordable housing. [Science Vs]
Who knew fossil hunters were so cut throat? [Atlas Obscura]
We now have access to Disney+. We may have gotten it for the kiddo but I am, 100%, going to use it to binge watch animated Disney movies for my own nostalgic feels. This week, I put on the newer movie Moana. This film has gorgeous animation - particularly where the ocean is concerned. Plus, I adore the music. Lin-Manuel Miranda hit it out of the park. [Disney+]
I'm not big on superhero/Marvel universe movies but, when the husband wanted to watch Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2, I was fine with it. To me, it was just a blockbuster flick and nothing more. I just don't get much out of this genre. That said, some scenes were very pretty to look at. And, I can readily admit, that I am always impressed by the makeup and costuming in these movies. [Disney+]
Who knew there were still movies we hadn't seen in the "Liam Neeson punches things" genre. This time, it was Run All Night. It follows Neeson, a former mobbish hitman, trying to protect his son who is being set up for murders he did not commit. The unknown (to me) co-lead, Joel Kinnaman, plays really well against Neeson. This movie feels gritty and lived in. It's one of the better entries in this field. Plus, Ed Harris plays a bad guy and I love that. [Max]
For my lunch meal prep this week, I wanted to use up the extra brussels sprouts we had in our fridge. That led me to make Italian chopped brussels sprouts salad. So. much. chopping. I think it took me nearly an hour to prep all of this. It was good but not great. I should have amped up the flavors in the dressing. Despite the touch of bland, I looked forward to enjoying this every day. [Ambitious Kitchen]
Now that we have our farm share, I'm selecting recipes that best use our produce haul. This week, I went with sausage and kale stew. Friends of ours affectionately call this "pizza stew" because it has the flavor of pizza without the crust. It was a delicious way to use our kale and the beet greens we had in our crisper drawer. [Budget Bytes]
The kiddo and I visited the National Gallery of Art with my best friend on Monday. Kiddo mostly power-walked through the exhibits but she did let me linger at this painting - which is good because I love it. [Instagram]
AI is everywhere and I am of mixed minds about it. That said, Giftwrap, an AI gift finder, intrigues me. Put in the recipient and a little bit about what they like and you’ll get some options.
I’ve got lots of big chunks of empty time on my work calendar. I am going to work on some website coding, gosh darn it!
I love Moana. I saw it twice in the theater. I often do that with kids' movies, or at least I did pre-pandemic. It's an easy way to lift my mood, especially if it has great music, too. I remember the year it came out, it was bitterly cold and gloomy outside all the time, and spending 103 minutes in Polynesia was a very welcome vacation.
I am not particularly interested in Marvel films/shows either. I have never been into boy comics or action movies. I wound up liking Jessica Jones and Luke Cage, though. I have only seen a few other MCU things, including Guardians of the Galaxy. If it weren't for the soundtrack and the adorableness of Groot, I don't think I would remember anything about it. (I also enjoyed watching Ant-Man, but that was 99.9% because I have a thing for Paul Rudd.)