Last weekend I went to watch non-league football at Canvey Island. I don’t really feel I should write about it too much in this newsletter other than to say ‘I do not, in all honesty, recommend that you spend a Saturday in February watching non-league football at Canvey Island’, but I would like to say in the club’s defence that you can get pints for £4.50 which makes it easier to pointedly ignore the 22 men shouting “FCUKING HOLD IT” at each other for 90 long, freezing minutes.
I also went to see contemporary dance last night – MY HOUSE HAS SO MANY ROOMS! Most of them admittedly empty, but nonetheless – which was warmer, but no less baffling (and the drinks were significantly more expensive). My ANALYTICAL TAKEAWAY from these experiences, which you will be grateful to learn I will happily share with you, is that you should basically never step outside your cultural comfort zone – it’s called a ‘comfort zone’ for a reason ffs, you wouldn’t want to hang out in your ‘torture and pain zone’ would you? No, you wouldn’t, so there.
Fcuking hell I am so so so tired. Can you tell? I worry you can tell.
I am still Matt, this is still Web Curios, and you are entirely entitled to just click the links and ignore the words this week, seriously.
By Tomona Matsukowa (this image lifted from TIH, for which thanks)
THE SECTION WHICH THINKS THAT IF YOU HAVE A NEWSLETTER WITH 140K SUBS WHICH YOU CHARGE £80 A YEAR FOR AND YOU MENTION THAT YOU FOUND SOMETHING IN MY P1SSY LITTLE EFFORT THAT YOU CHOOSE TO LIFT AND QUOTE ME ABOUT THEN THE LEAST YOU CAN FCUKING DO IS INCLUDE A BACKLINK (YES I AM TALKING ABOUT YOU, THE KNOWLEDGE, I KNOW YOU ARE READING THIS), PT.1:
- Protein Monster: It is, I think, reasonable to say that I consume an above average quantity of internet – a statement which simultaneously sounds like the world’s least-impressive flex and an admission of a life which has been terribly wasted! – and as such like to think that I have a reasonably good mental rolodex of ‘weird and obsessional webprojects which don’t really seem to make sense except as some sort of art project or, viewed less-charitably, an expression of deep-seated pain and trauma’, and yet every few weeks I will stumble across something so weird and massive and utterly inexplicable and so fundamentally perfect for Curios, and which has been around for AGES, that I get quite annoyed with myself for not having seen all of the web by now. Consider sites like Protein Monster your regular reminder that the internet is FCUKING MASSIVE and, much like the sea, we have explored about ~3% of it and that which remains contains far stranger things than are dreamt of even in my philosophy (do not, please, feel emboldened to share your philosophy with me at this point). YES OK BUT WHAT IS IT FFS??? Hm. It’s possible the reason I’ve taken such a meandering route to describing this is that I am not wholly sure how to do it – but let me try. Protein Monster is a collection of webpages which all link to each other in a massive, incomprehensible spiderweb of…I don’t know, calling it ‘content’ feels frankly offensive to what I presume is the single person behind it. This is a dizzying, strange, confusing, funny, interesting, unsettling, NSFW, creepy and deeply, deeply online website which doesn’t seem to have any coherent theme or aim beyond ‘LOOK AT ALL OF THIS STUFF’ – the main link takes you to the closest the site has to a ‘landing page’, so you could just start there, or alternatively you might prefer the more, er, *intense* entrypoint of this (occasionally quite NSFW) page (you will need to click the black page once it loads to kick it off), which acts both as rough visual introduction to the overall aesthetic of the whole thing and also as what I honestly think is one of the most perfect ‘this is what ONLINE is like’ little bits of video/audiowork I have seen in years (no, honestly, I mean it). This is VERY, VERY ODD (also, it is INCREDIBLY deep/wide, and I have only scratched the surface of what is in there – it doesn’t *feel* like it goes anywhere ‘bad’, but, well, caveat emptor).
- My Life In Weeks: A really lovely piece of information design work by one Gina Trapani, one which, I have just realised, she’s been working on for over 10 years (as an aside, I have found SO many long-running webprojects in the past few months, it’s genuinely slightly humbling to realise that Curios is to REAL web OGs as the mayfly to the elephant) and which is effectively a week-by-week log of her entire life; per Gina, “This is a map of my life, where each week I’ve been alive is a little box. Tap a box to see what I was doing where that week.” This is SUCH a nice way of visualising information over time which has a lot to recommend it and I can imagine might be a nice thing to explore with kids or as a family as a means of tracking your experiences (as someone with, basically, neither of those things, I am rather shooting in the dark here, but I am sure you can work something out).
- EU Accelerationism: Anything the US techcnuts can do! This is a very dull-looking website (and, if I’m honest, the content’s not exactly thrilling – no, wait, come back!) but the ‘thinking’ behind it is, I think, interesting in terms of the ambient temperature of the tech industry in the EU (or certain aspects of it, at least) in Q1 2025 (and, more importantly, in light of the ‘all gas, no breaks’ approach seemingly being adopted by the sector in the US. Basically this is a manifesto (CAN THE WORST PEOPLE IN THE WORLD PLEASE STOP WRITING FCUKING MANIFESTOS PLEASE?) whose contents are a call for Europe to DEREGULATE THE FCUK OUT OF TECH!! You can, hopefully, imagine the sort of ‘hey, everything would be fine if we just let capital and markets do their thing!!’ rhetoric at play here, but this, from one of the first sections, gives you a representative flavour: “By exempting businesses with annual revenues below €10 million from complex regulations like VATMOSS, GDPR, and the EU AI Act, we empower entrepreneurs to focus on creating great products and reaching market success without being weighed down by compliance.” Ah, yes, compliance! Having to adhere to rules and regulations designed to protect consumers and society from the impact of your attempts to get incredibly fcuking rich! Of course you shouldn’t be held back from plutocracy and a seat at the Big Table by pesky concerns around, I don’t know, not fcuking everything and everyone in half with your fcuking disruption! Via my friend Ben; let’s hope that this dies on its fcuking ar$e.
- RPLY: It is, of course, lazy and simplistic to make sweeping comments about THE MODERN WORLD and our increasing reluctance to put the effort in to personal relationships and friendships and social obligations (equally, one might also argue that given the psychic cost of, well, EVERYTHING FCUKING ELSE that it’s perhaps understandable we don’t necessarily have a lot of energy left, but); equally, though, as someone now well past middle age, it’s impossible not to sight slightly at the premise behind RPLY, which is a downloadable plugin for MacOS (Apple only) which will integrate with iMessage and, if you let it, check your inbox for any unanswered messages, suggest responses and, as far as I can tell (if you go full ‘run my life, The Machine!’), send replies for you too. Which on the one hand I can imagine being potentially useful for people who find their volume of inbound overwhelming, fine, but which also a) makes me quite sad – I DO NOT THINK THAT SAYING ‘YES’, ‘NO’ OR ‘THANKYOU’ ARE THINGS SO TAXING THAT YOU NEED TO OUTSOURCE THE TASK (apologies for what I am sure is a moderately-ableist point of view there); b) relies on the AI not sending wildly inappropriate or unhelpful responses without your say-so, accepting meetings on your behalf or telling a supplier to go fcuk themselves with a spoon. I am probably being unfair – I am basing this solely on vibes and this writeup, after all – but, generally, this does not ‘spark joy’ in me (I appreciate that the degree to which I LOVE exchanging messages with people makes me possibly a bad judge of the widespread appetite for this sort of service, to be fair).
- The Feelings Engine: This is a promo for a travel agency in (I think) the US, the inexplicably-named Black Tomato (honestly, WHY?), which has built an LLM layer over the top of their search functionality which allows you to pump in natural language queries about the sort of emotions you’d like to evoke on your travels and, in exchange, get a suggested trip which, The Machine promises, will PERFECTLY MATCH what you are looking for. To give you an idea of how this works, I just told it that “I want to feel a gentle sense of melancholia born of the knowledge that all human life is transient and, in the end, nothing we do will matter because we are all going to die” – in return, it suggested the following, which, fair play, was more than I was expecting and a couple of rungs up from TUI: “Deep in the Sarawak Jungle of Borneo, where ancient tribes have lived in harmony with nature for countless generations, you’ll find a profound connection to both the transient and eternal aspects of human existence. This 13-day journey strips away all modern distractions as you learn to live among the Penan, one of the world’s last remaining nomadic jungle tribes. In this pristine wilderness, you’ll learn their ancestral survival techniques – skills passed down through generations, each teacher knowing their knowledge must be preserved even as they themselves pass on. Sleeping in hammocks beneath vast jungle canopies, cooking over open fires, and learning to read the forest’s ancient signs, you’ll experience a way of life that has remained largely unchanged for millennia. The culmination of your journey is a solitary 48-hour challenge where you’ll rely solely on your newly acquired skills – a powerful reminder of both human resilience and vulnerability in the face of nature’s timeless rhythms.” If only I had a spare £13k and someone to go with.
- PxPxPx: Collaborative creativity website corner! I like this a lot – basically you click the link and you’re taken to a BIG canvas on which you and anyone else currently vising the site can draw, with the gimmick being that you can only draw in one colour and each user is assigned a different pantone shade, meaning it’s created this sort of semi-collaborative, semi-adversarial game where people vie for control of different bits of the map…so basically, as you have doubtless gleaned, it’s another riff on the /r/Place gimmick, but a) it’s a nice one; b) it’s pretty obviously something which has been shared around various kid internet places and there’s something slightly pleasing about how the overwhelming sentiment from The Youth, at least the online youth, is ‘fcuk Elon’ (also, “USA is fcuked” which made me laugh). Basically this is like a graffiti wall at a school, if the school were digital and international and infinite. Which, honestly, sounds AWFUL, but this is fun, promise (also, as far as I can tell, there is NOTHING BAD on there!).
- Project 2025 Observer: As the whole Project25 thing continues look morelike an actual plan rather than the fevered imaginings of a bunch of semi-libertarian wingnuts (oh, hang on, it was BOTH? FFS!), this site is tracking the ostensible progress of the US administration towards fulfilling the aims set out in the original project plan – which, I get, is a laudable attempt at transparency, but, equally, given the lack of actual clarity on what is ACTUALLY being done vs what is being shouted about VERY LOUDLY, and the judicial impediments being used to prevent some of the more obvious and egregious attempts to gut the state, it’s possible that this paints a SLIGHTLY more apocalyptic picture than is quite warranted (it is equally possible, though, that this is simply me huffing vast authorial quantities of copium, so, well, take your pick). Oh, and seeing as I am briefly doing US politics in the uptop, here is the website for 50501, which is a protest organisation in North America which is working to help organise on-the-ground and grassroots movements and which has coordinated peaceful protests across the country over the past couple of weeks, and here’s the site for Tesla Takedown, an organisation which is trying to get people to protest the company, dump Tesla stock and fcuk That Fcuking Man in the wallet (there’s quite a lot of chat from People Who Have Studied Him about how his actual cash position is significantly more parlous and vulnerable than his paper position might make him appear, which, honestly, I don’t understand enough about money to really meaningfully grasp but which I hope against hope is true).
- Grocy: This is one of those very particular links where I imagine that, while for 99.9% of you it will be baffling, incomprehensible and deeply-tedious (why ARE you reading this? Why am I writing it? Gah, existential angst at 7:52am doesn’t bode hugely well), there will be 0.1% of you (so, what, a statistical third of a person?) for whom this is LIFE-CHANGING and transformative. Are YOU the sort of person who gets a vague sense of excitement from the concept of life-tracking and the quantified self? Do you like hacking stuff together? Does the concept of a ‘linux kernel’ not only mean something to you but NOT strike fear into your very heart? OH GOOD! Grocy is what looks like a reasonably-powerful bit of code which you can use to effectively track and manage your domestic food arrangements (oh, hang on, there’s also an app! This isn’t just for the codemongs!). Honestly, it is worth clicking through and seeing all the stuff this does – you can barcode scan all your food so it knows what’s in your fridge/larder, you can use it to stack stock quantity and set purchase reminders, it has an integrated recipe suggestion feature which works from your known, in-stock ingredients, the code’s all open source…honestly, for the right type of person this will be THRILLING (and, depending on what the rest of their life and family is like, for their partner and offspring it may be…less so, I concede).
- The Tube Ad Critic: Someone is doing reviews of the ads on the London Underground – specifically of the copy – and offering up star ratings to the various campaigns, which is a nice idea (I am aware that enough of you reading this still work in advermarketingpr and so might be in the market for such a link, even if it’s possibly a *bit* industry-specific for general consumption). In general this is pleasant enough, even if I would personally prefer it were the author to be, well, a bit more aggressively opinionated, especially given the fact that seemingly no fcuker in the entire London ad industry knows how to write decent fcuking copy anymore. Three out of five stars.
- JS Kaleidoscope: Upload any image you like and watch as it turns into a beautiful kaleidoscope. Or at least it’s beautiful if you use an abstract or a landscape – if you use a photo of your own face, as I did upon first finding it, it very quickly becomes a deeply-horrifying exploration of some fairly long-buried meat-based insecurities (or it does if you’re me).
- The Substance Lookbook: OBVIOUSLY I haven’t seen The Substance, but I am aware enough of the world outside the internet to know that there was a film called The Substance, it starred Demi Moore, and it was a groundbreaking satire on femininity, sexism, ageing and female identity/agency / a deeply disappointing schlockfest which failed to stick the landing (delete as per). Anyway, point is I have an idea of the film’s general VIBE, and as such very much enjoyed looking through what is apparently the lookbook produced for the movie and which is just such a perfect encapsulation of a mood/aesthetic; honestly, this is good because it is SO CLEAR and SO DIRECTIONAL and even someone with as little aesthetic sense as me can get what it’s communicating and what ‘the look’ is. Really interesting and a very good example of how to craft (or think about crafting, or maybe cohering) a campaign or project.
- The Protector App: A small bugbear about The Modern World – I hate it as much as you do (probably more, it’s fair to say), and I hate the techcnuts (again, trust me on this, given the amount of time I have been forced to spend thinking about them over the past few years it’s fair to say that my hatred might even outweigh yours), and I think that increasingly large parts of How Capitalism Works and How It Manifests In Society are deeply troubling…but, also, I am really fcuking bored of people taking stuff and creating narratives around it that fit their worldview but which aren’t, well, true (DOING THAT IS HOW WE GOT HERE YOU FCUKING MORONS). A case in point was the reaction to the release this week of Protector, marketed as an app which lets you hire ex-Forces personnel to be your on-demand bodyguard/militarised escort service – some of it was funny (‘Uber for Goons”), but most of it was hyperbolising about “OH MY GOD THEY’VE DONE MILITIAS-AS-A-SERVICE” and the like…except, well, I don’t think that’s what this is. This is a lifestyle flex, a status booster, something for the ‘gram and the Tok and probably not intended as an actual, honest-to-goodness security proposition. Witness the marketing videos the company put out pre-launch, expertly (if…somewhat morally uncritically) deconstructed in this Reel, which is very clearly pimping this as a really fcuking pimped way to arrive at Prom, basically. Can we all say Boom Boom Aesthetic?
- Ludocene: Ooh, this is a really nice idea. If you’re into videogames, you might find the current publishing landscape overwhelming (particularly on PC) – outside of the big publishers, there is a dizzying number of titles being published each month and it’s hard to develop an understanding of what’s interesting and good given the impossibility of outlets being able to cover everything worthwhile. Enter Ludocene, a recently-launched Kickstarter which is hoping to fundraise to launch, er, ‘Tinder for games’ – “Ludocene is a new way to find your next game. It uses rich human-researched data to build your catalogue of games. It uncovers amazing, unusual and unexpected matches not just the usual suspects or big popular games. It feels like you’re playing a game, where winning is discovering video games that perfectly match your tastes: Build your perfect deck of games you love; Pick experts whose taste you trust; Discover your best matches in the tailored suggestions. Each game is represented by a card that you can interact with: click to view a game trailer and flip to view more details and the best prices on storefronts.Like a dating app, you are offered a stream of games. You swipe up to reject and swipe down to add them to your deck of games that represent your taste. Every choice refines the stream of games offered as you hunt for your next game.” It’s 25% there with three weeks to go, and in general seems like a decent idea that might prove really helpful with enough momentum and users behind it.
- Nobody Here: OH GOD ANOTHER BRILLIANT AND MASSIVE AND INEXPLICABLE WEBSITE! This is also, I think, OLD – but it’s quite hard to tell, and judging by the baffling but still very active concern it is still very much A Thing (FCUKING HELL I JUST LOOKED AND IT IS 27 YEARS OLD! 27! THERE ARE PEOPLE DISMANTLING US DEMOCRACY WHO ARE YOUNGER THAN THIS WEBSITE!). This is the website of…someone? I think they are Dutch, and I presume they’re a coder, but, honestly, I don’t really know – I fell in love with the homepage (honestly, the animations and interactions on the silhouette figure would have been enough for me to include this, even without the baffling labyrinth of STUFF that sits beneath it) and then just found myself clicking around and…Jesus, this, per Protein World, goes DEEP but it is so, so pleasingly incoherent and WHOLLY personal, and I increasingly believe (work with me here) that, actually, at the age of, say, 11, every single kid in the world should be given a set amount of cloud storage space and some basic dev education and told ‘this is your foreverplace, make of it what you will’ and left to turn it into whatever they choose because how much better would the web be if there were more sites like this? IT WOULD BE LOADS BETTER YOU JOYLESS FCUKS.
By Marta Blue
THE SECTION WHICH THINKS THAT IF YOU HAVE A NEWSLETTER WITH 140K SUBS WHICH YOU CHARGE £80 A YEAR FOR AND YOU FOUND SOMETHING IN MY P1SSY LITTLE EFFORT THAT YOU CHOOSE TO LIFT AND QUOTE ME ABOUT THEN THE LEAST YOU CAN FCUKING DO IS INCLUDE A BACKLINK YOU CNUTS (YES I AM TALKING ABOUT YOU, THE KNOWLEDGE, I KNOW YOU ARE READING THIS), PT.2:
- Komaeda: In what is an absolute BUMPER WEEK for ‘inexplicable and very large and occasionally-unsettling websites which your very own internet Virgil couldn’t begin to adequately describe even were he an actual, proper writer’, I think Komaeda might be the oddest of all. It opens with the phrase ‘i cant fcuking breathe’ and, honestly, only gets weirder from there. It’s a bit janky, there are parts of it that feel oddly like a Newgrounds animation c.2005 (REAL HEADS WILL KNOW) – including this alternative entrypoint, which feels like a portal back to a VERY different online time – and, again, I don’t have the faintest idea what is on all the pages or how deep this goes and so can’t promise there isn’t anything bad lurking somewhere in the depths, but it doesn’t feel like that sort of site fwiw. This is – and I know I say this all the time, but I feel it quite strongly, so – ART. Weird, broken, possibly-not-very-good art, but art nonetheless. There is music, there are visuals, there are stories and comics and essays and animations and VERY WEIRD THINGS, and quite a lot of stuff that sounds, honestly, like schizophrenia, but who can tell in this day and age? ENJOY!
- Psst!: In an era in which it seems clear that any ostensible – even if cosmetic – progress we might have made on the concept of ‘corporate responsibility’ is going to be rolled back hard over the course of the coming years, consequences be damned (I am not going to keep repeating the ’Boom Boom’ thing, but, well, that), it feels like the concept of leaking and whistleblowing is set to be more important than ever. Effectively Psst! is running a digital dead drop, letting anyone anonymously share files with their legal team who will then analyse and see if there’s anything that can be done with said information – per the blurb, “Psst is a non-partisan, non-profit public service that helps people bring forward public interest information. We’ve worked with a lot of people concerned about something they’ve seen at work. We know the tricks powerful corporations use to shut people up. We also know a lot of important information never comes out due to legal threats. In our era of AI, Big Tech and decreasing government guardrails, we need safe channels to share public interest information more than ever.” Perhaps unsurprisingly given Where We Are, “Currently, the Psst team is prioritizing depositors who are working in tech or US-based governmental entities” – should there be any of you reading this who fit that description, this might be worth a look. Although based on what I was told yesterday about some…changes another VERY LARGE company is set to make to its stated ‘values’ (LOL) and what this stuff practically means in terms of likely directions of corporate travel, I might suggest that any of you working in BIG EVIL CAPITAL LAND might want to think about this sort of thing too.
- Fiverr Go: I have long thought that the digital pieceworkers and VAs in places like the Philippines are going to be some of the earliest canaries to fall as AI starts cutting swathes, and it’s hard to see this latest innovation from gigworking platform Fiverr as anything other than an accelerant to the inevitable endpoint (ie all of those jobs are gone). The gimmick here is that Fiverr is allowing CREATORS (in this case v/o artists, illustrators and graphic designers from what I can tell) to spin up their own AI models based on their work, and license those models on a per-use basis to customers, theoretically combining AI and HUMAN CREATIVITY to create a passive income stream – the digital, model version of you works all day and night while you put your feet up and enjoy the fruits of your talented, exploited and extended via the magic of The Machine. Except, well, I can’t see how the economics work here because – and I appreciate that what I am going to say is possibly going to sound mean, and maybe is, but I think it is also true – none of the v/o artists or illustrators or designers tending to ply their wares on platforms like Fiverr are distinct enough to be worth the fee, and won’t be better enough than what, honestly, you can get from AN Other model where you can either use it for free or get an infinite license for a tenner a month rather than having to pay a per-work rate. So, well, why the fcuk would I bother? If I want to support a REAL CREATOR I would like them to do the actual work rather than using a model of their style; it feels like this offering misses several points. Still, as I often say, I don’t know the first fcuking thing about business or economics or, really, anything at all, and so expect this to be how we all do business in the AI-enabled luxury communist future of tomorrow.
- Olyn: What is Olyn? Per the landing page, “Pioneering the Future of Media Distribution…Supporting creators to monetize and distribute their media content without listing dependencies or platform constraints.” SO EVOCATIVE! SO INSPIRATIONAL! SO ARTISTIC AND HUMAN! Leaving aside the frankly-hideous prose, Olyn is marketing itself as a direct-to-consumer model for film creators – per this TC writeup, it: “claims to offer a new model for film and video distribution that leans on the power of social referrals to spread “à la carte” streaming content. Although any size of production — from Hollywood blockbuster downward — can use the platform, the company claims it could be a game changer for the independent film industry, which tends to struggle against the marketing budgets of the bigger movies distributed on mainstream streaming platforms…Instead of films being sold to platforms like Netflix, the model hinges on the marketing budget of the filmmakers themselves, combined with influencers, film critics, and content creators acting as distribution partners by embedding purchase links within their content, blogs, and social channels.” Look, it’s possible I’m missing something here but I don’t wholly understand exactly how ‘share a link to your content!’ is a revolutionary or disruptive proposition given, well, that’s how people have been sharing things for 25 years by now, but perhaps there’s something I’m missing (if this company still exists in the same shape in three years time I will eat my pants) (I would be grateful if a) none of you bothered tracking this; b) in three years’ time this is a long distant memory and I am finally happy and at rest).
- Sky360: I know that, per horse_e_books, everything happens so much, and that it is therefore hard to keep track, but it honestly feels like approximately a decade since a bunch of incredibly smart people in the US started taking potshots at planes because they thought that they were alien craft. Except it wasn’t, it was only a few months, and, given the potentially-parlous state of the world over the coming few years and the likely growing sense of paranoia which everyone’s going to start wearing like so many additional lbs of stress around our necks (you can feel it, can’t you, the knotting?), it’s likely that we’ve not seen the last of mad online UFO conspiracies – which is what makes it so UTTERLY TIMELY that someone has seen fit to launch Sky36, a project promising to establish “Observational Citizen Science of Earths atmosphere and beyond” (the infelicitous punctuation there is theirs on this occasion rather than mine, I promise) which DEFINITELY won’t attract every Area51-coded crank in the Northern Hemisphere, no sirree. Basically the spelling and tone of this makes me…somewhat concerned, but should you be the sort of person who wants to build their own UFO-detection system out of homebrew parts then, well, GREAT!
- Cutting Edge AI Video, February 2025 Edition: Or “LOL WE ARE SO COOKED (again)!”, choose your headline per preference. This comes via Arnicas’ superb newsletter (I can’t stress again how much you should be subscribed to it if you have any interest in visual / storytelling tech and AI) and is an experimental lora (that is, fine-tuning mod) for one of the better text-to-vid models, Hunyuan which basically creates vids that look…a bit crap. Honestly, watch these and tell me you’d be able to tag them as fake if presented to you in-feed – I posit that you would absolutely fcuking not be able to. I know I keep banging this drum, but I don’t think people are quite *getting* it, still – these things are not going to go away, they are not going back in the bottle, and they are very soon (within the year, doubtless) going to be good enough to create photorealistic video that mimics the grain and lighting and…mundanity of real life, and they will then become small enough and lightweight enough to run locally on a phone or laptop and cheap enough that the generation cost is less-than-trivial…and at that point I genuinely don’t know what happens. Do you?
- Rabbithole: As everyone begins to realise that what both OpenAI and Google both admitted two years ago (specifically, “we have no moat here”) is entirely true, we’re basically entering the era of ‘all the models are largely interchangeable outside of specific usecases and they all do basically the same stuff’, which is good for users if not for the poor chumps who put all their eggs in the wrong basket (what’s that? Is that the sound of no violins whatsoever? It fcuking is, you know!). So it is with ‘Deep Research’, which is being touted by everyone as THE NEW HOTNESS. Rabbithole is a standalone platform (although almost certainly built on top of something else – oh, yes, Gemini, with other integration coming soon) which is designed specifically for ‘exploring interest areas’ – while I wouldn’t rely on it AT ALL for anything that actually mattered (which applies to all AI research, by the way – it is simply not good enough yet to be useful, unless what you consider ‘useful’ is ‘something that could have been produced by an average 16 year old’ in which case, well, raise your fcuking bar ffs), it is actually quite a fun way of asking a question and letting it lead you – give it an area of enquiry and it will not only give you answers with sources, but it will also suggest other directions in which you can take your enquiry – so a question about, say, situationism, will give you a sourced breakdown of the movement but also suggested branching questions around its impact on urban exploration practices, its subsequent influence on later social movements, and specific techniques employed in the movement’s early days to create ‘experiences’, all of which are, honestly, not bad follow-ups! As a means of getting the broad ‘shape’ of a topic, this could be quite useful imho.
- Angus Nic Neven: Look, I think Angus Nic Neven is a musician. I THINK. That, though, doesn’t explain why his personal website is possibly the most obviously, overtly, occult thing I think I have ever seen on the web ever. Like, I don’t believe in evil and witches and things like that (when, like me, you sold your soul to the devil aged 17, it is important to maintain this sense of grounded reality lest you get impossibly panicked about What Is To Come), but it’s impossible not to get the sense that there is something about this whole site that…well…*bodes*, basically, and not well. If the internet existed when I was at secondary school and I was caught looking at this by Sister Janet she would have been even more concerned for my mortal soul than she already was, let’s just say. I am reasonably-certain that clicking this link won’t leave you cursed or in any way doomed to a life of satanically-linked torment of the soul but I can’t promise it for sure, is all I’m saying. Should Angus happen to ever see this, please do drop me a line and explain what the fcuk is going on here because I love it but it also scares me quite a lot.
- Sacred Forests: While I might personally be, er, *somewhat bearish* about the future prospects of the planet (at least without the aforementioned Big Tech Hail Mary that we’re all seemingly now fixated on), I am very much pro initiatives that exhibit a slightly more hopeful outlook, such as Sacred Forest. It’s also a really nicely-made website which features a friendly capybara early-on, which endeared me to it no end. This is basically a project that seeks to work with indigenous communities to encourage rewilding of natural areas in a way in which is consistent with, and sympathetic to, their community and practice as well as benefiting the planet – per the blurb, “Sacred Forests is an Amsterdam born, internationally operating social enterprise start up at the forefront of a ‘new’ yet ancient way to protect forests, Indigenous forest conservation.” In typical Dutch fashion they acknowledge the slightly-eyeroll-inducing trope of ‘a bunch of rich white guys doing the saviour thing’ – although ‘acknowledging’ is not the same as ‘not doing the thing you are acknowledging’, to be clear, and this is obviously an initiative with its heart in the right place – your mileage will obviously vary, but I thought this was an interesting idea and, from the simple point of view of communication and digital/visual design, is very nice indeed.
- EggThread: How online are you, do you think? VERY online? I think this thread is a decent test. It is about the fact that there are no eggs in the US, and those that there are are currently very expensive. It starts off silly and gets increasingly nonsensical and internetty, and, honestly, I think this is possibly one of the purest expressions of Where We Have Ended Up With Digital Culture – serious news filtered through what is now an accreted series of layers of memetics and irony and DEEP-FRIED KNOWLEDGE; a decade or more of marination and maceration of ourselves in the internet soup has led us to this point, where someone can post a photo of an empty palette of eggs in a shop with the caption “Trump take egg” and a dozen or so (mad) posts later someone will write “You need slurp juice to buy egg now” AND IT MAKES SENSE (to me. Oh God, I am irrevocably ruined, aren’t I?). Consider this a useful barometer of the extent to which you’re able to function in polite, offline society (or, er, not).
- Goosebumps: An infinite runner – click to jump, collect the tokens, avoid the rocks! Simple, fast and visually rather glorious (but VERY hard to play, to my mind at least, as a result of the visual clutter), this is a promo for something or other (I don’t know or honestly care what) which will give you a pleasing few minutes’ distraction before you move onto something a bit more nourishing.
- 3d Maze: Also via TITAA, this is FUN – basically your task is to navigate a 3d maze in FPS; by the end of your first run you can choose the size of the next maze you take on, meaning you can create something enormous and very, very difficult. The only way this fun, lightweight little webtoy could be improved would be to allow you to upload your own images to act as wallpaper for the maze – being confronted with a closeup of your own hideous visage would give a new and compelling reason to get the fcuk out of there sharpish, for example.
- The Flash Museum: I can’t believe I haven’t featured this before. The Flash Museum is, er, a digital museum of old flash games, converted so they play in modern browsers – if you spent any time on Newgrounds (second mention this week, IT’S SO BACK!) in the early-00s then you will recognise SO MANY of these titles – in the main they are fcuking awful, but there’s a certain janky period charm to them imho. Also there are some legit classics – Alien Hominid still slaps as much as it did when I spent entire days doing nothing but playing it at work (RIP Citigate Public Affairs, you are wiv da angles) – although you should be aware that, given the 00-iness of the whole thing there is also a bunch of stuff of possibly questionable taste to modern eyes (I think I saw a variant on ‘columbine simulator’ up there, for example).
- Weekend At Mario’s: Via Rob at B3ta, what would the first level of Mario be like if the plumber was dead? Not that much fun tbh, but the ragdoll physics here makes this a reasonably-enjoyable thing to futz around with for five minutes or so.
- Virtual PC: A virtual PC! With a virtual hard-drive! On which you can play actual, full PC games from the late-90s! Seriously, there’s DOOM (obvs!), Sim City 2000 (honestly, load it up just to hear the intro music and get the purest hit of Proustian nostalgia you will feel all week), Civilisation, Age of Empires…GO BACK TO YOUR CHILDHOOD WHEN EVERYTHING WAS SIMPLE!
- Little Sisyphus: Our final game this week is this LOVELY little NES-style platformer with a surprisingly-sophisticated physics model at its heart – this is HARD, be warned (or at least it was for me), but I guess that’s era-appropriate, and it’s really very impressively made indeed considering it all runs in-browser, and it came to me via Andy and you should give it a go RIGHT NOW.
THE CIRCUS OF TUMBLRS!
- King of Blood: Via the lovely people over at MeFi, King of Blood is a webcomic which is less sinister than its name might immediately suggest but which isn’t wholly un-sinister, if you see what I mean.
THE TROUGH OF (INSTA) FEEDS!
- TV Wishes: Brought to my attention by the ever-excellent Links, TV Wishes: “is an Instagram account dedicated to sharing photos and videos from Flickr. Evie, the college student based in Missouri who runs the account, visits the site daily, sifting through thousands of images and pulling them from obscurity: a ferret eating a pink lollipop; two teddy bears tucked into bed; teens embracing on a suburban rooftop; an evening lightning storm. tvwishes has accrued a significant following, and many of her fans, like Evie herself, were not active on the platform during its heyday.” I LOVE THIS SO MUCH, and I also love this interview with the Evie in question by another person whose work I love, Molly Soda.
- The Office of Collecting: This is the Insta feed of The Office of Collecting, which is: “part wonderland, part library, and part nostalgia machine, devoted to the diminutive, the misplaced, the unusual, and the forgotten. The space is an elaborate love letter of leftover fragments from our collective memories — meticulously organized and displayed for maximum satisfaction and delight.” Basically this is a load of random stuff – but INTERESTING random stuff, arranged and photographed beautifully, and if you’re interested in, generally, ephemera and *slightly weird sh1t* (HI WELCOME YOU HAVE FOUND YOUR PEOPLE) then you will enjoy this. Brought to me via Things Magazine, which published a new update overnight which is worth checking out for more excellent design-y links.
LONG THINGS THAT ARE LONG!
- Potions & Spells: Ok, this isn’t in fact long at all, but it felt interestingly *true* to me and I am increasingly of the opinion that Sean Monahan is one of about a dozen people worth reading on Where Modern Culture Is Going Right Now (not that I think he is always right, but he is always interesting) – also it harked me back to something I’ve been wanging on about for over a decade(!) now, to whit “when Grey predicted that New Witches was going to be a big consumer trend in 2015 I laughed and mocked them in Private Eye, but actually it turns out they were totally right and in fact the stuff they identified has actually been one of the more significant, if one-remove, influences on the past ten years imho’ and which I feel this little article neatly bookends. It’s short, see what you think: “What if, instead of using clinical language to describe addiction, we used spiritual terms? The gambling addict is not suffering from compulsive behavior; he is possessed. Schoolchildren are not distracted by screens; they are hypnotized. Ozempic is not a medication; it’s a potion. Propaganda does not use communications strategies; it casts spells. Or on a more personal note—it’s not a vibe shift; it’s a broken spell? Maybe UFOs aren’t extraterrestrials; they’re demons.” It doesn’t feel good, but it feels…accurate.
- Human Mediocrity will Pave the Way: I had a slightly awkward moment before Christmas when I was asked to speak at an event (about AI, OBVIOUSLY!!!!) and realised after being there for 3m that I hated everyone in the room with an incandescent passion and that I was therefore not going to care about being polite, and ended up effectively implying that everyone there deserved to lose their jobs to The Machine because they were in the main involved in the pollution of the cultural ecosystem with infinite quantities of dreck (I think the exact moment I realised I was possibly going TOO FAR was when I asked everyone in the room who thought the work they did attained the heady heights of ‘mediocre’ on a day to day basis to raise their hands and then, at the nervous laugher, just looked at them all, unsmiling. It’s a miracle they paid the fcuking invoice tbh) – I felt that very strongly when reading this brilliant and thought-provoking piece by Mo Diggs. There is a lot in here so I won’t attempt a full summary, but, roughly, he’s not attempting to say ‘THERE HAS BEEN NO GOOD CULTURE IN TWO DECADES’ so much as he is saying ‘the viewing of culture through the prism of digital/social media has created a flattening effect which has not contributed to the creation of valuable works, in the main’ – there’s a lot more in here about the inherent cultural drivers of social platforms, the way this all ties into the wider dark forest internet theory, etc, but even if you’re just interested in a topline read of ‘culture in the now’ then this really is very interesting indeed.
- Ryan On Trump: I sort of assume you all read Garbage Day already – and you should, much as it pains me to heap praise on a significantly more successful product, it is one of the best English-language newsletters in the world if you’re interested in the digital culture and how it is CHANGING US – but if you don’t then let me take a moment to recommend the headline post, and this one, giving an overview/perspective on the ongoing attempts to reduce the US State apparatus to smouldering rubble and tens of thousands of government employees with Grok (probably). I appreciate you might not want to stick your face in That Man’s Firehose, so to speak, but if you want at least to stay at least minimally informed about all the things that are actually happening – and What It Means – then Ryan (and Rusty at Tabs, actually) are both doing a superb job. You don’t get analysis like this in the NYT, in the main: “At some point between 2019-2021, the internet conquered mainstream media, viral content replaced traditional corporate entertainment, and Republicans have first mover’s advantage. This is their victory lap after all the shameless years they spent posting Pepe the Frog memes and setting up YouTube channels to brainwash children. But I am surprised by how thoroughly the Democrats and, more generally, leftists and liberals have ceded internet culture, as a whole, to the right. Every meme, every format, every platform is fertile ground for an adversarial regime that knows how to spin them into cheap and easy propaganda and there is no line they aren’t willing to cross. You can quibble, and say that conservatives are better funded or less squeamish about being cringe or care less about telling the truth. But none of that really changes the fact that social media, the machine that now decides what pop culture looks like, is now an inherently right-wing space. And regardless of what explanation you subscribe to as to how we got to this point, that is a huge cultural loss for the left. And one without a clear solution in sight.”
- The Milei Rugpull, Explained: You may not want to read about crypto – fcuk, NOONE wants to read about crypto, there is literally nothing on earth less fun other than possibly self-circumcision (not that I have ever tried that, to be clear) – but this story is worth gritting your teeth for, because FCUKING HELL it really doesn’t feel like the sort of thing that someone ought to be able to get away with in terms of ‘naked criminality abetted by an elected official’. This is written by Molly White and so is thankfully readable and clear and does a decent job of handholding you through What Apparentlly Happened – the big takeaway here, to my mind, is the sheer, naked venality on display, which to my mind is the hallmark of all these cnuts and what, troublingly, makes me think that the current version of the Trumpian project might actually be a bit more stable than the 2016 version. Back then it was all warring factions and competing interests within the court – this time, though, it seems all the various jesters and courtiers and viziers, while still variously mad, racist, deranged, perverse, criminal and sick, are all united under the single, unifying goal of ‘become as rich and embeddedly powerful as is humanly possible’, which makes it…less likely that there will be some sort of krakatoan fallout. Still, though, here’s hoping!
- New Junior Devs Can’t Code: File under ‘I told you so’ or ‘hm, so it turns out that we DO lose something if we outsource the thinking!’, this is an entirely-predictable story about how software companies are finding that junior devs they’re trying to hire…can’t code. Sure, they can cobble together stuff from Github, but in terms of actually understanding the first principles of what they are doing and how the various languages at heart *work*…nope, not so much. Which, obviously, is Not Great – I was thinking the other day when reading about the great, amusing COBOL fcukup, that we are soon going to be at a point where there is noone left alive in the world who knows how COBOL actually works (it was created in the 60s iirc) and, given how many crucial systems are built on it, how that might end up being a touch problematic in the long-term. OH WELL!
- Using GPT as a Focus Group: I present this not because I think it is a good idea – I am at best sceptical, and at worst of the opinion that this is, at present, a ruinously-dumb thing to do – but because it is obviously happening and therefore it’s important to know about. This is a blogpost by one James Breckwoldt who used GPT to effectively simulate responses ‘in the persona of’ ordinary voters talking about ordinary issues, and found that these synthetic opinions sounded very much like the sort you hear from actual focus groups from actual real people…and, look, I am sure James is a nice man and a good professional, but, also, THAT IS LITERALLY WHAT THE FCUKING TECHNOLOGY IS BRILLIANT AT DOING FFS, MAKING WORDS THAT LOOK BROADLY LIKE THEY ARE THE RIGHT SHAPE FOR WHATEVER YOU WANT THEM TO DO. Also, given the nature of How The Machine Works, literally ALL it is doing is probabilistically arranging tokens based on its prediction of where they migh best fit based on what it has seen before…meaning OF COURSE IT SOUNDS LEGIT BECAUSE IT IS DRAWING ON SOURCE MATERIAL OF PEOPLE IN THE PAST TALKING ABOUT SIMILAR ISSUES! Like, I get what they are trying to say here, but I simply don’t see what practical, actual value this delivers you – I could literally MAKE UP focus group quotes based on ‘things I know that people think based on listening to conversations on buses and at football matches and in the supermarket’, but that would be bullsh1t too! If anyone thinks I am being stupid here, by the way, please do feel free to drop me an email and explain why, I am genuinely happy to listen to any explanation you can offer me. Also, given you now have companies like this one offering this service at scale, I wonder where the liabilities fall – who carries the can when my business model, guaranteed to be a success based on the insanely-positive reactions of the modelled, virtual customerbase, was not in fact a billion-dollar win and I am in hock to the bank for a violent wedge and the bailiffs are banging on the door while I drink meths and cry? WHAT THEN???
- The Deep Research Problem: I referenced this earlier, but should you not want to take my word for it that all the AI research tools are not quite ready yet then why not instead listen to BUSINESS GURU Ben Thompson, who basically says the same things as me but with more rigour and therefore the ability to charge £1k an hour consultancy fees, the git.
- The DuoLingo Brand Handbook: I have refused, and continue to refuse, to cover the fcuking owl suicide thing, and DuoLingo brand discourse overall is something I have…very limited interest in, in the main, but this document, published…recently-ish, I think, is interesting from the point of view of advermarketingpr and how to create, define and manage a brand. If you want to skip straight to the ‘so, how exactly does pretending that your green anthropomorphic owl mascot has offed itself as some sort of ironic metacommentary on the state of the world drive app downloads?’ section then you can find it on p54
- Barcoding Brains: Neuroscience is very much something I wish I understood more than I actually in fact do; still, what little I *do* manage to grasp is fascinating and slightly-horrifying (turns out that thinking about the fact that there is this blancmange-textured mass just sort of wobbling about inside my skull really does trigger the appalled ‘GAH DEAR GOD I AM MADE OF MEAT AND IT IS HORRIFYING’ palmsweats, as attested by how hard I am finding it to type at this exact moment), and this is really interesting, both in terms of human biology and psychology but also how that intersects with our attempts to create digital analogues to ‘thinking’, etc. This is basically about where we are with attempts to ‘map’ and understand the structure of the brain and how all the various nodes within it connect, and what implications the nature of said connections have for the nature of consciousness and thought. Crunchy but so interesting (if you can get past the meathorrors).
- The Largest Sofa You Can Fit Around A Corner: Ok, this is far too maths-y for me to be able to claim to meaningfully understand in any way, but I love the central question – specifically, what is the optimal and largest design of sofa that can be moved around a corridor corner. A Certain Type of Reader may recall that the irrevocably-stuck sofa was a central running gag in…I think the first?…Dirk Gently novel, and as such this article basically gave me Proustian flashbacks to being VERY YOUNG and reading that and being utterly captivated by the silliness and yet extreme seriousness of the gag (it is a silly premise, but it is a very serious mathematical problem). Anyway, I think IKEA should make this sofa IRL.
- 50 Years of Travel Tips: I try and keep the list posts to a minimum in Curios, but this was interesting and alien enough to me to make me want to link it – this is by Kevin Kelly, who has traveled a LOT, and has decided to share What He Has Learned over decades of seeing the world. Some of these seem eminently sensible – for example “If you detect slightly more people moving in one direction over another, follow them. If you keep following this “gradient” of human movement, you will eventually land on something interesting—a market, a parade, a birthday party, an outdoor dance, a festival.” – whilst others seem…a bit pushy, frankly. I don’t, honestly, think that this is good advice at all, and would genuinely love to see a tourist attempt this in London one afternoon where I think they would probably get some…interesting responses: “Crash a wedding. You are not a nuisance; you are the celebrity guest! The easiest way to do this is to find the local wedding hall where weddings happen on schedule and approach a wedding party with a request to attend. They will usually feel honored. You can offer the newlyweds a small token gift of cash if you want. You will be obliged to dance. Take photos of them; they will take photos of you. It will make your day and theirs. (I’ve crashed a wedding in most of the countries I have visited.)”
- Why GenZ Doesn’t Trust The News: With the obvious caveats that a) GENERATIONS ARE NOT MONOLITHSZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ; and b) this is a SMALL sample, this is also a very interesting ‘kids, in their own words’ piece which will probably make you a *bit* despair-y about the whole ‘will we ever get back to having a widely-shared conception of truth and reality, do you think?’ thing. I know that this is, on some level, just how we are wired as animals – pretty privilege is, after all, a think that transcends professions and disciplines – but, equally, try reading this and not then wanting to sigh and possibly go for a long walk off a short, very high roof: “Sometimes, trust is based on something even simpler: looks. “I kind of trust people based on how they look,” admits Jake, 17, another student.” OH JAKE FFS.
- Making AI Recipes: Do you still spend any time on Facebook? I genuinely don’t – even the one Group I used to use it for (W_W) is now on Whatsapp, so there’s honestly no reason for me to engage with it beyond morbid curiosity – but the last time I did I ended up in an algohole that wanted to show me nothing other than ‘recipes’ for desserts accompanied by obviously-AI-generated images. In this piece, Katie Notopoulos speaks to people who have made such recipes and tries one herself – the upshot, basically, is ‘fine-if-bland’ – but the food here is really the least interesting thing, compared to (and this is something I think not enough people grasp right now) the number of people who simply DIDN’T REALISE THE IMAGES AND RECIPES WERE AI, or DIDN’T FCUKING CARE. To all of you confidently predicting some sort of mass consumer backlash to ‘AI slop’, well, LOL! I would like to gently remind you that if you work in communications, post on Bluesky and live in a metropolitan urban environment YOU ARE NOT IN ANY WAY REPRESENTATIVE OF ALMOST ANYONE ELSE ON THE PLANET. So, er, maybe wind your neck in on the ‘normal people hate this stuff, actually’ rhetoric, eh?
- Haley Mlotek’s Divorce: Mlotek has a book on her divorce out this week, which is being serialised all over the place – I have found myself enjoying the extracts far more than I expected to given I have never been married and therefore never divorced (I have, er, inspired a divorce, but that’s a different story). I think this is lovely writing on the practical realities of adult love and its end, and there’s a second, different extract here on her and her husband’s experimentation with ‘open marriage’-type stuff as a failed attempt to save everything which I also enjoyed. Try this for size and see what you think: “I could tell you about my last night with my former husband, but mostly I think about how the night passed no matter what we did to hold still. My marriage ended when those scenes stopped being scenes. The fights were the same as the conversations, and the coffee was made no matter what was said the night before. The fight I think of as being the first—although there were others before it, this was just the one I think of as the beginning of our end—happened when we were far away from home, on a vacation with our friends. Late at night and very drunk, we screamed at each other. Remembering our volume the next morning was its own kind of hangover. As the sun rose, our friends in the next room coughed and I heard it through the walls; everyone who hadn’t passed out from rum had heard us fight as clearly as I heard that cough. I apologized—I always did—then I spent more time thinking about his words than I thought about what I was sorry for. “But you’re my wife,” my husband had said to me, and that was enough. Only eight weeks into our marriage, my status in his life was as his wife. I took no pleasure or power in that title. I felt what he meant: that what I was to him should be enough. The next morning, he apologized, and I knew he meant it—both the apology and the title. He was sorry. I was his wife.”
- That Mad Article About the Tory Chief Whip: This has by now been filleted for the juicy bits by everyone under the sun, but it’s worth reading the full thing – and if you’re yet to come across any of it then WOW are you in for a treat. A note to Americans and other foreigners – the role of the ‘Whip’ in UK Parliamentary politics is effectively that of ‘leader’s enforcer’, so the whips are in charge of making sure all the party members toe the line, vote in the right way, stay out of trouble and don’t rock the boat. Which, it turns out, also involves covering up a LOT of very, very dodgy stuff. This might all sound fantastical – and, look, it involves scatplay, which most accounts of workplace indiscretions don’t quite build up to – but as someone who’s worked in and around politics, and in Westminster, it is entirely true that there are lots and lots of people in and around the UK system who are at best FCUKING WEIRD and, at worst, UTTERLY FCUKING BROKEN. It’s quite hard not to read this and think ‘hm, maybe a system that continues to attract people who exhibit these sorts of behaviours when they should in fact be running the country and trying to make it work better for everyone perhaps isn’t working as intended?’ OR MAYBE IT IS, EH????
- Alt Lit: Sam Kriss (is he still cancelled in UK media? It seems so, which is odd considering several other people who appear to have made…full comebacks from the same era’s opprobrium) writes about the Online Novel, oddly something I have been thinking/talking about a bit recently. He’s ambivalent about the ones he writes on, but I enjoyed this in part because he’s a reliably-entertaining prose stylist but also because the ones he liked more were the same as the ones I liked more, and because I think he makes some good points about style and bravery and formalism – although I read this paragraph and disagreed quite strongly, because, to my mind, the novel continues to be VERY BAD at parsing the past two decades as lived digitally and I don’t see what he writes here as being true AT ALL. Who do YOU agree with? “Everything that’s published now is shaped by the forms and concerns of online, whether it’s explicitly about the internet or not. Our bestselling poets write what are essentially Instagram captions. Publishers live or die at the mercy of BookTok. The recent glut of normie novels about trying to be a good person, or minor racial contretemps between professional-class narcissists, or hot girlies who don’t really do anything in particular—all of these are attuned to the sensibilities of an implicitly online public, whose sense of what might be an interesting topic for literature is downloaded directly from Twitter. The most mainstream Obama-endorsed fiction is now more like a feed than anything else: a series of sharp little lines, minute observations, quips, for you to quote on social media. The whole culture industry is just the internet’s auto-coprophagy, feeding its own waste back into the system. You are not radical or cutting-edge because you remember Neopets.”
- Chess: Nicholas Pearson writes in the LRB about his son playing chess, to quite a high level, and the modern game more generally – this is a lovely piece of writing, giving an overview both of the game at its highest level in 2025 but also at the grass-roots, and also a moving portrait of watching your children grow up and apart from you and how beautiful and also desperately affecting that must be. This is gorgeous.
- On The Beach: I have never read anything by Nevile Shute – he exists in my mind mainly as acharacter detail in the Adrian Mole books if I’m honest – but I absolutely loved this essay, all about his novel ‘On The Beach’ and its relevance to contemporary culture and the global response to the climate…can we call it the climate apocalypse now? Fcukit, I am going to start! This is by Peter Coviello, and it is smart and interesting and made me really want to go and read a book about the end of the world written in 1957, which, honestly, doesn’t happen to me very often.
- The Convent: Another piece by Miles Ellingham in the Londoner, a journalist whose stories about the capital I am very much enjoying of late – this is a wonderful portrait of Tyburn Convent located in Central London, just off Marble Arch, and where the nuns live an ascetic and quiet existence, praying for the capital’s millions of souls (and, presumably, everyone else’s too). This does an excellent job of painting the nuns Ellingham speaks to as real people, three-dimensional beneath the wimples, and it’s all the better for the lack of rose-tint on the authorial lens.
- A Day in the Life of a Jobless Copywriter: This is by Andrew Boulton, and it is very funny but also DEAR FCUKING CHRIST. Not only is this the worst time in recorded human history in which to attempt to exchange written words for money, but it’s only going to get worse! WHY DON’T I HAVE A MORE DIVERSIFIED SET OF SKILLS FFS? Eh? What? Yes, it is entirely my own fault, why are you looking at me like that?
- Ideal Candidate: Our final longread this week is this SUPERB (if not *wholly* subtle) bit of satirical writing about the modern labour market. You will get the premise from the full title, but I promise you this really is worth reading all the way through – it is very long, but it is also very good (and it is written in the second person, which for some of you will be enough to recommend it), and Scott Smitelli sustains it superbly throughout. Do not, though, read this on Sunday, if you’re one of those people who spends the hours from 5pm onwards in tears at the prospect of a new week.
By Julia Hetta
AND NOW, MOVING PICTURES AND SOUNDS!: