What's Everyone Reading At The Moment?

What about the famous "black screen of death" in Samsung phones' S series?
I avoid Samsung at all cost. Had a tv and micro and they all broke down in no time but I was able to return the tv and the micro was from the previous person in the rental. I think I even had a third Samsung product that failed but can't remember what it was.
 
What about the famous "black screen of death" in Samsung phones' S series?
A geezer in Tenerife tried to sell me a Samsung tablet but down there you might end up coming home with what looks like one but find it is completely empty. My bro went to Italy and a few european countries at the end of his rehab and the man in charge of the rehab bought a video player in Italy and came home and found out that it was completely empty inside.

Börje was gutted!
 
I've not read it, but I was thinking about how Ulysses by Joyce was written to portray the events of just one day. It's an interesting concept. A lifetime can go by in one day. Shall attempt to read.
virginia woolfe's Mrs. Dalloway is written much the same way. same stream of consciousness kind of writing as we follow mrs. dalloways movements over the course of one day. I don't think ive ever been so impressed with the way a book is written as I was with mrs. Dalloway.
 
im reading the master and margarita because neil recommend it! ahaha
I cant really afford to be buying books but I had an old gift card that I had for years and didn't know if there was anything on it. as it turns out there was just enough left on it to cover the cost of the book with only 35 cents owing. it's meant to beeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee <3
 
I do remember starting to read that book and I was terribly impressed. I read 'To The Lighthouse' It was mad, but it was a madness I could understand. Infinitely readable.
I love how she seems to view all of life as being connected and full of significance. even the air is full up of something in her novels.
 
When I first started reading her I didn't know what she was on with, but then you get to know a writer and you enter their world. Her madness seemed to coincide with mine!
I didn't know what to make of her at first either. I read a couple pages of mrs. Dalloway and declared it unreadable and didn't pick it up again for years. then I decided "alright im gonna read this whether it kills me", and once I started it wasn't hard at all. you really get inside her head.
 
1A12DE5F-83C7-46E6-84D6-FE626C0DFC85.jpeg


Inspiring my kitties with some poetry by their people such as this gem:

Welcome New Cat
Welcome New Cat
Let me show you around
This is my couch
This is my bed
These are my toys
That is my food
Over there is my kitchen
Hallway, Living Room, and Home Office
This is my human
And here is the door
Because as you can clearly see
There is nothing here for you

or this one:

I Get Along
I get along with you
I get along with your family
I get along with everyone I ever meet
Only to get to hear someone say,
“I don’t know why you got a cat
They’re so unfriendly.”
I get the urge sometimes
To wield my claws on the whole world
 
Can Dolly Parton Heal America?

BA96BB23-32B6-4BE7-BE6A-120AA1D96238.jpeg

https://www.npr.org/2019/10/29/774339834/can-dolly-parton-heal-america


Can Dolly Parton heal America? That's the question posed by a new podcast from WNYC, Dolly Parton's America, hosted by Radiolab's Jad Abumrad. It's not as far-fetched as you might think.

The public radio host saw something in the iconic country singer — the way she's composed of contradictions — that seemed somehow revelatory of the country as a whole. Dolly's concert-attending fan base is composed of people we don't think of having a lot in common these days.

"You've got evangelical church ladies standing next to men in drag — Dolly is massive in the LGBTQ community — standing next to guys in trucker hats," Abumrad says. "All of these different communities, on either side of the 'culture wars,' all standing together, shoulder-to-shoulder, singing the same song."

NPR's Ari Shapiro spoke to Abumrad about reexamining Dolly's cultural legacy, including her overlooked musical genius, her ability to exist as a container for so many ideas about America and her unexpected rejection of the label "feminist." Hear the story in the audio player above and read on for an edited transcript of their conversation.

Ari Shapiro: To talk for a minute about Dolly, the person and the musician, rather than Dolly, the metaphor and the symbol: You, in the very first episode, talk about the way she is perceived, the jokes about her appearance — the jokes she makes herself. And then you pivot to the argument that she is among the best songwriters of the 20th century. One expert tells you that, if she were alive at a different time, she would have been like Mozart. How do you reconcile those two aspects of Dolly Parton, the genius and the punchline?

Jad Abumrad: I don't quite know how to reconcile them. But it does strike you when you look back at 1960s Dolly and 1970s Dolly, and you look at the number of songs that she's writing — I mean, to say she was prolific doesn't even capture it. She is writing No. 1 song after No. 1 song. Some of the greatest songs in pop music, they're falling out of her head.

She told me in one interview — she wasn't sure if this was true — but she may have written "I Will Always Love You" and "Jolene" on the same night. "I Will Always Love You" is a song that hit No. 1 in three consecutive decades [and] almost did it a fourth time. "Jolene" is a song that was translated into, I think, 40 different languages, and there are 200 different covers. And that happened on the same night?

So why does somebody who can do that need to be a caricature, need to be a parody? Is it just the reality of existing as a woman in America and in Nashville at that time?

Yeah, I think so. I mean, that's certainly what she said to me. If you consider Dolly in 1967, when she really hits the scene as the "girl singer" on The Porter Wagoner Show — at that time, there were no lead roles for women. I mean, the female singer was sort of a decorative aspect of the male show, and that didn't leave a lot of place for someone like Dolly, so she perhaps had to sort of play the male game for a while. But I think she would tell you, as she famously says, that it's just what made her comfortable. It's just how she wanted to look.

The first episode of the podcast has already sparked a vigorous discussion about feminism, and what it means to call yourself a feminist. Because in your conversations with Dolly, she really bristled at that label.

She shot that right down.

Her quote to you was, "I think of myself as a woman in business. I love men." Even though her actions and her song lyrics and her life are embraced by so many feminists, right?

Yeah. That was a real surprise to me. She is talked about openly as one of the great feminist figures of our time, and so I just figured she thought of herself that way. But clearly she has a complicated relationship to that term, as do many people who grew up in places in America that aren't the coasts. So yeah, it was interesting to see the ways in which she very much walks the walk, but doesn't quite want to talk the talk, because she knows how that might be perceived by certain segments of her audience.

How many hours did you spend with her? She gave you a lot of access.

I think we counted 12, over two years.

And this is a woman who has been interviewed hundreds of times, or thousands of times, over decades. Did you feel, going into those conversations, like there were a lot of questions she had never been asked?

There was a moment when we began to ask her questions about some of her early music, which no one ever asks her about, and her songwriting, which very few people ask her about. 1960s Dolly is just an ocean of pain in her songs — mostly witnessing the female pain around her, I think, in her community growing up.

She described that early music to you as "sad-ass songs." They address death, miscarriages, abandonment, things like that.

It's a really interesting, almost musical form of journalism that you're seeing in that early work. And I think when she saw that we were taking her really, really seriously as a songwriter and as a person who is one of the great creative spirits of the last 60 years, she was willing to answer almost any question.

The series seems to present this big question of whether Dolly can heal the divide in our nation — whether there is some kind of secret sauce in Dolly Parton that can solve the problems that face America today. Did you feel like you came away with an answer to that question?

No, that's sort of the question that never resolves for me. The image that runs through the entire series is what it is like to be at a Dolly concert. The fact that that space even exists in America right now is heartening to me. [Now,] to argue the other side — I mean, are these people really talking to each other? Are they arguing about politics and coming to some new understanding? Probably not. But they're in the same space, and they're been deeply polite in her presence. That feels like something to me.

Does she feel like she's created that, or just like she's fortunate to be in it? Does it feel precarious to her — did you get a sense of that?

I mean, she's so deeply apolitical, at least in what she says, that I think she protects that space by choosing not to speak on certain topics. And I don't think she's avoiding something so much as she's sort of putting her foot down in a different spot.
 
Can Dolly Parton Heal America?

View attachment 53397
https://www.npr.org/2019/10/29/774339834/can-dolly-parton-heal-america


Can Dolly Parton heal America? That's the question posed by a new podcast from WNYC, Dolly Parton's America, hosted by Radiolab's Jad Abumrad. It's not as far-fetched as you might think.

The public radio host saw something in the iconic country singer — the way she's composed of contradictions — that seemed somehow revelatory of the country as a whole. Dolly's concert-attending fan base is composed of people we don't think of having a lot in common these days.

"You've got evangelical church ladies standing next to men in drag — Dolly is massive in the LGBTQ community — standing next to guys in trucker hats," Abumrad says. "All of these different communities, on either side of the 'culture wars,' all standing together, shoulder-to-shoulder, singing the same song."

NPR's Ari Shapiro spoke to Abumrad about reexamining Dolly's cultural legacy, including her overlooked musical genius, her ability to exist as a container for so many ideas about America and her unexpected rejection of the label "feminist." Hear the story in the audio player above and read on for an edited transcript of their conversation.

Ari Shapiro: To talk for a minute about Dolly, the person and the musician, rather than Dolly, the metaphor and the symbol: You, in the very first episode, talk about the way she is perceived, the jokes about her appearance — the jokes she makes herself. And then you pivot to the argument that she is among the best songwriters of the 20th century. One expert tells you that, if she were alive at a different time, she would have been like Mozart. How do you reconcile those two aspects of Dolly Parton, the genius and the punchline?

Jad Abumrad: I don't quite know how to reconcile them. But it does strike you when you look back at 1960s Dolly and 1970s Dolly, and you look at the number of songs that she's writing — I mean, to say she was prolific doesn't even capture it. She is writing No. 1 song after No. 1 song. Some of the greatest songs in pop music, they're falling out of her head.

She told me in one interview — she wasn't sure if this was true — but she may have written "I Will Always Love You" and "Jolene" on the same night. "I Will Always Love You" is a song that hit No. 1 in three consecutive decades [and] almost did it a fourth time. "Jolene" is a song that was translated into, I think, 40 different languages, and there are 200 different covers. And that happened on the same night?

So why does somebody who can do that need to be a caricature, need to be a parody? Is it just the reality of existing as a woman in America and in Nashville at that time?

Yeah, I think so. I mean, that's certainly what she said to me. If you consider Dolly in 1967, when she really hits the scene as the "girl singer" on The Porter Wagoner Show — at that time, there were no lead roles for women. I mean, the female singer was sort of a decorative aspect of the male show, and that didn't leave a lot of place for someone like Dolly, so she perhaps had to sort of play the male game for a while. But I think she would tell you, as she famously says, that it's just what made her comfortable. It's just how she wanted to look.

The first episode of the podcast has already sparked a vigorous discussion about feminism, and what it means to call yourself a feminist. Because in your conversations with Dolly, she really bristled at that label.

She shot that right down.

Her quote to you was, "I think of myself as a woman in business. I love men." Even though her actions and her song lyrics and her life are embraced by so many feminists, right?

Yeah. That was a real surprise to me. She is talked about openly as one of the great feminist figures of our time, and so I just figured she thought of herself that way. But clearly she has a complicated relationship to that term, as do many people who grew up in places in America that aren't the coasts. So yeah, it was interesting to see the ways in which she very much walks the walk, but doesn't quite want to talk the talk, because she knows how that might be perceived by certain segments of her audience.

How many hours did you spend with her? She gave you a lot of access.

I think we counted 12, over two years.

And this is a woman who has been interviewed hundreds of times, or thousands of times, over decades. Did you feel, going into those conversations, like there were a lot of questions she had never been asked?

There was a moment when we began to ask her questions about some of her early music, which no one ever asks her about, and her songwriting, which very few people ask her about. 1960s Dolly is just an ocean of pain in her songs — mostly witnessing the female pain around her, I think, in her community growing up.

She described that early music to you as "sad-ass songs." They address death, miscarriages, abandonment, things like that.

It's a really interesting, almost musical form of journalism that you're seeing in that early work. And I think when she saw that we were taking her really, really seriously as a songwriter and as a person who is one of the great creative spirits of the last 60 years, she was willing to answer almost any question.

The series seems to present this big question of whether Dolly can heal the divide in our nation — whether there is some kind of secret sauce in Dolly Parton that can solve the problems that face America today. Did you feel like you came away with an answer to that question?

No, that's sort of the question that never resolves for me. The image that runs through the entire series is what it is like to be at a Dolly concert. The fact that that space even exists in America right now is heartening to me. [Now,] to argue the other side — I mean, are these people really talking to each other? Are they arguing about politics and coming to some new understanding? Probably not. But they're in the same space, and they're been deeply polite in her presence. That feels like something to me.

Does she feel like she's created that, or just like she's fortunate to be in it? Does it feel precarious to her — did you get a sense of that?

I mean, she's so deeply apolitical, at least in what she says, that I think she protects that space by choosing not to speak on certain topics. And I don't think she's avoiding something so much as she's sort of putting her foot down in a different spot.

As we say in Sweden instead of Duh:
"Does Dolly Parton sleep on her back?".

I bet her tits are saggy and a bit grey here and there now and cellulite like pits in them all over. What a dim and useless human being.

So much work done she turned into an android that simply refuses to die.
 
As we say in Sweden instead of Duh:
"Does Dolly Parton sleep on her back?".

I bet her tits are saggy and a bit grey here and there now and cellulite like pits in them all over. What a dim and useless human being.

So much work done she turned into an android that simply refuses to die.
Looks like you missed the point of the article
 
Can Dolly Parton Heal America?

View attachment 53397
https://www.npr.org/2019/10/29/774339834/can-dolly-parton-heal-america


Can Dolly Parton heal America? That's the question posed by a new podcast from WNYC, Dolly Parton's America, hosted by Radiolab's Jad Abumrad. It's not as far-fetched as you might think.

The public radio host saw something in the iconic country singer — the way she's composed of contradictions — that seemed somehow revelatory of the country as a whole. Dolly's concert-attending fan base is composed of people we don't think of having a lot in common these days.

"You've got evangelical church ladies standing next to men in drag — Dolly is massive in the LGBTQ community — standing next to guys in trucker hats," Abumrad says. "All of these different communities, on either side of the 'culture wars,' all standing together, shoulder-to-shoulder, singing the same song."

NPR's Ari Shapiro spoke to Abumrad about reexamining Dolly's cultural legacy, including her overlooked musical genius, her ability to exist as a container for so many ideas about America and her unexpected rejection of the label "feminist." Hear the story in the audio player above and read on for an edited transcript of their conversation.

Ari Shapiro: To talk for a minute about Dolly, the person and the musician, rather than Dolly, the metaphor and the symbol: You, in the very first episode, talk about the way she is perceived, the jokes about her appearance — the jokes she makes herself. And then you pivot to the argument that she is among the best songwriters of the 20th century. One expert tells you that, if she were alive at a different time, she would have been like Mozart. How do you reconcile those two aspects of Dolly Parton, the genius and the punchline?

Jad Abumrad: I don't quite know how to reconcile them. But it does strike you when you look back at 1960s Dolly and 1970s Dolly, and you look at the number of songs that she's writing — I mean, to say she was prolific doesn't even capture it. She is writing No. 1 song after No. 1 song. Some of the greatest songs in pop music, they're falling out of her head.

She told me in one interview — she wasn't sure if this was true — but she may have written "I Will Always Love You" and "Jolene" on the same night. "I Will Always Love You" is a song that hit No. 1 in three consecutive decades [and] almost did it a fourth time. "Jolene" is a song that was translated into, I think, 40 different languages, and there are 200 different covers. And that happened on the same night?

So why does somebody who can do that need to be a caricature, need to be a parody? Is it just the reality of existing as a woman in America and in Nashville at that time?

Yeah, I think so. I mean, that's certainly what she said to me. If you consider Dolly in 1967, when she really hits the scene as the "girl singer" on The Porter Wagoner Show — at that time, there were no lead roles for women. I mean, the female singer was sort of a decorative aspect of the male show, and that didn't leave a lot of place for someone like Dolly, so she perhaps had to sort of play the male game for a while. But I think she would tell you, as she famously says, that it's just what made her comfortable. It's just how she wanted to look.

The first episode of the podcast has already sparked a vigorous discussion about feminism, and what it means to call yourself a feminist. Because in your conversations with Dolly, she really bristled at that label.

She shot that right down.

Her quote to you was, "I think of myself as a woman in business. I love men." Even though her actions and her song lyrics and her life are embraced by so many feminists, right?

Yeah. That was a real surprise to me. She is talked about openly as one of the great feminist figures of our time, and so I just figured she thought of herself that way. But clearly she has a complicated relationship to that term, as do many people who grew up in places in America that aren't the coasts. So yeah, it was interesting to see the ways in which she very much walks the walk, but doesn't quite want to talk the talk, because she knows how that might be perceived by certain segments of her audience.

How many hours did you spend with her? She gave you a lot of access.

I think we counted 12, over two years.

And this is a woman who has been interviewed hundreds of times, or thousands of times, over decades. Did you feel, going into those conversations, like there were a lot of questions she had never been asked?

There was a moment when we began to ask her questions about some of her early music, which no one ever asks her about, and her songwriting, which very few people ask her about. 1960s Dolly is just an ocean of pain in her songs — mostly witnessing the female pain around her, I think, in her community growing up.

She described that early music to you as "sad-ass songs." They address death, miscarriages, abandonment, things like that.

It's a really interesting, almost musical form of journalism that you're seeing in that early work. And I think when she saw that we were taking her really, really seriously as a songwriter and as a person who is one of the great creative spirits of the last 60 years, she was willing to answer almost any question.

The series seems to present this big question of whether Dolly can heal the divide in our nation — whether there is some kind of secret sauce in Dolly Parton that can solve the problems that face America today. Did you feel like you came away with an answer to that question?

No, that's sort of the question that never resolves for me. The image that runs through the entire series is what it is like to be at a Dolly concert. The fact that that space even exists in America right now is heartening to me. [Now,] to argue the other side — I mean, are these people really talking to each other? Are they arguing about politics and coming to some new understanding? Probably not. But they're in the same space, and they're been deeply polite in her presence. That feels like something to me.

Does she feel like she's created that, or just like she's fortunate to be in it? Does it feel precarious to her — did you get a sense of that?

I mean, she's so deeply apolitical, at least in what she says, that I think she protects that space by choosing not to speak on certain topics. And I don't think she's avoiding something so much as she's sort of putting her foot down in a different spot.

As much as I like you there is no way you can pull off the Dolly style or even the rockabilly girl style you are so obsessed with. Seen your picture and you're more a Detroit working class girl with wide hips dressed in Walmart fashion who manages to stay afloat just about by slaving at useless jobs for a living while always denying your heritage and your own race and slowly sliding into black culture cause you are forced to or else they would beat you up or worse.

It's not because you prefer or even like black culture that you became part of it but because you like so many white people is weak and afraid and not as tough as you want others to believe.

There was doubt in those eyes and even the feeling of a person from a broken home lifted up from its roots an thrown out into a sad shitty working class part of America that is long gone by now where jewish pawn shops is the only way for people like you to make it until the next paycheck or charity hand out.

if that neighbour was black you would be all over him offering him help. Will you ever realise that you are a racist?

Everything from you breathes ignorance based on self denial but in your own head you are a nice person doing good in this world. The highlight of swedish gatherings but never hearing what they say behind your back.

"Here she is again miss Nightingale with her insufferable cat stories and baby birth hips that never came to any use and now we have to listen to her being all fake upbeat and positive when there is nothing going on in her life and I hear she makes bread for her mom".
 
As much as I like you there is no way you can pull off the Dolly style or even the rockabilly girl style you are so obsessed with. Seen your picture and you're more a Detroit working class girl with wide hips dressed in Walmart fashion who manages to stay afloat just about by slaving at useless jobs for a living while always denying your heritage and your own race and slowly sliding into black culture cause you are forced to or else they would beat you up or worse.

It's not because you prefer or even like black culture that you became part of it but because you like so many white people is weak and afraid and not as tough as you want others to believe.

There was doubt in those eyes and even the feeling of a person from a broken home lifted up from its roots an thrown out into a sad shitty working class part of America that is long gone by now where jewish pawn shops is the only way for people like you to make it until the next paycheck or charity hand out.

if that neighbour was black you would be all over him offering him help. Will you ever realise that you are a racist?

Everything from you breathes ignorance based on self denial but in your own head you are a nice person doing good in this world. The highlight of swedish gatherings but never hearing what they say behind your back.

"Here she is again miss Nightingale with her insufferable cat stories and baby birth hips that never came to any use and now we have to listen to her being all fake upbeat and positive when there is nothing going on in her life and I hear she makes bread for her mom".
Nice try but you don’t have a clue. Keep creating stories in your mind as they obviously amuse you. Stringing a few facts together and trying to fill in the blanks doesn’t make them true though.
 
Nice try but you don’t have a clue. Keep creating stories in your mind as they obviously amuse you. Stringing a few facts together and trying to fill in the blanks doesn’t make them true though.
I didn't do it to trigger you again though you were. But there is something sad with you cause making bread and food like you do is all about forgetting your inner troubles of the past and even today. It is great therapy while the bread smells nice but then the real world is there again and nothing helps.

I have you so sussed out I am not even choosing to be cruel here but honest. Your views doesn't match the overall story of your life. There are cracks there so big no one would be able to cover them up.

Allow yourself to break down and drop the smug smile and the thing with pleasing everyone and move on and create a real life cause the way you live has been done by countless other women as a replacement for a real life. Women do that when they fail in life and compensate by making themselves the center if everything.

But it's not real living and never will be. I am on your side and I talk about the side you never even tried. You are so blocked in your mind from trauma that you live life in panic not enjoying a single second of it.

Give yourself a break!
 
I didn't do it to trigger you again though you were. But there is something sad with you cause making bread and food like you do is all about forgetting your inner troubles of the past and even today. It is great therapy while the bread smells nice but then the real world is there again and nothing helps.

I have you so sussed out I am not even choosing to be cruel here but honest. Your views doesn't match the overall story of your life. There are cracks there so big no one would be able to cover them up.

Allow yourself to break down and drop the smug smile and the thing with pleasing everyone and move on and create a real life cause the way you live has been done by countless other women as a replacement for a real life. Women do that when they fail in life and compensate by making themselves the center if everything.

But it's not real living and never will be. I am on your side and I talk about the side you never even tried. You are so blocked in your mind from trauma that you live life in panic not enjoying a single second of it.

Give yourself a break!
Nope. Not triggered. You don’t know me. You don’t know my story. You are only making guesses and you are oh so wrong.
 
Nope. Not triggered. You don’t know me. You don’t know my story. You are only making guesses and you are oh so wrong.
ffs, is this idiotic shit of a dick still around here? cmon tat, lets ignore this grand arsehole obsessed with his own smell for awhile. lil t. wants to have a word with ya in the other thread before he leaves for hollywood again.
 
this thread at the moment. actually, as i type, i am reading these letters as they turn into words and a sentence or two. thank you for this joy. the end.
 
ffs, is this idiotic shit of a dick still around here? cmon tat, lets ignore this grand arsehole obsessed with his own smell for awhile. lil t. wants to have a word with ya in the other thread before he leaves for hollywood again.
Someone is even more triggered and dipping her nose in other peoples business and I wonder why. Maybe you think she cannot stand up for herself but I am calling out the bullshit in you ladies and now you are all butt hurt.

You are all living a lie. I wonder when germans were ok with speaking and writing in english cause isn't that obeying the headmaster that turned your country into a swiss cheese?
 
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