Carbon dating has shown us that a painting begun by one painter was completed more than five thousand years later by another, which is as though a painting begun before the time of the first pharaohs had been recently completed.
— Werner Herzog, Every Man for Himself and God Against All
The regular schedule of the fairs is also part of their appeal for publishers. The fairs become self-imposed deadlines for projects, as they're the perfect opportunity (or excuse) to launch new work, plan related events, and generally celebrate a growing catalog of publications.
— Christopher Sleboda and Kathleen Sieboda, "The State of Fairs from Bostor to San Francisco," Idea
awful / true
— @kellianderson on John McPhee, "Writing teaches writing." via @parisreview
He kept marking important passages. His father Rudolf, my archeologist grandfather, had done the same thing. Most of the books in Rudolf's library were copiously underlined and annotated, but in the mania of his last years, he started underlining everything in a book from beginning to end. Every line, every word, every letter.
— Werner Herzog, Every Man for Himself and God Against All
Every element of text in the book-essays, captions, end notes, ISBN, and cover-is set in 11 pt Diatype Semi-Mono. This deliberate typesize choice was made to remove conventional typographic hierarchies.
— @christophersleboda
Sometimes I show his adorable face, sometimes I hide it. I'm figuring out in real time what feels best. It's for all the reasons you'd imagine it is, but also - there's something so magical about childhood. It just feels like it should be a bubble of peace and privacy and coziness as much as it can be. "Well then why even share the picture if you're going to cover his face?" I guess because l've always thought of this as a digital scrapbook, and it doesn't feel right if he's not in it - a lot! Pictures like this, altered though they are, still make me smile and remind me of this moment in time. A time when he spent almost his whole first year of life in the feedstore as we embarked on this wild adventure. This is just where l've landed for now. A little bit of both, and reserving the right to feel differently at any time.
— @bigskycaroline
Not knowing things that many others do often has serious economic consequences.
— J. D. Vance, Hillbilly Elegy
When you have completed what you thought you had to do
— The Raconteurs, "Steady, As She Goes"
I think actually humanity has been protected by the fact that the overlap between really smart, well-educated people and people who want to do really horrific things has generally been small. Let’s say I’m someone who I have a PhD in this field, I have a well-paying job. There’s so much to lose. Even assuming I’m completely evil, which most people are not, why would such a person risk their life, risk their legacy, their reputation to do something truly, truly evil? If we had a lot more people like that, the world would be a much more dangerous place. And so my worry is that by being a much more intelligent agent, AI could break that correlation.
— Dario Amodei, "Dario Amodei: Anthropic CEO on Claude, AGI & the Future of AI & Humanity | Lex Fridman Podcast #452"
A few weeks ago, dozens of photographs of the "We Are Our Mountains" ("Tatik-Papik*) monument in occupied Artsakh disappeared from Wikimedia Commons. A red text box emerged, warning against uploading new images in which the monument features prominently, as it is located in "a country that does not provide Wikimedia Commons-acceptable freedom of panorama." The monument, composed of volcanic tuff stone and weighing thousands of pounds, had not moved, of course. But its surrounding, invisible borders, and thus applicable copyright laws, had changed.
— @hyperallergic, "When Copyright Transforms the Right to Remember"
Perhaps one day he will read this book and understand. As Gloria wrote in her journal in 1971, reflecting on the deaths of the people she knew and loved, "So many and then there's no one left but one's self. Then one knows it's only the long walk of the blood, one's children, that endure."
— Anderson Cooper and Katherine Howe, Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty
For 27 years, photographer Deanna Dikeman photographed her parents waving goodbye in their driveway.
— @welcome.jpeg
"I'm a writer" Truman Capote said, "and I use everything."
— Anderson Cooper and Katherine Howe, Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty
Isamu Noguchi, Lobby Ceiling for Magic Chef Building (now a U-Haul store), 1946-1948.
— @craighlee
l've been wary of what and how much to share these past few months. Our two selves (my own as a new mother and my daughter's) are taking shape. We are malleable and soft. Full of aw and curiosity as well as some anxieties. How much do I want to let unfold online? What's mine to share?
— @ereedlee
They only have meaning when they are seen by other people, when they are shown, when they are an economic vehicle.
— Elliott Earls, "I Almost Died! Show Me a Designer in Their 40's! My Response | Episode 142 | Elliott Earls"
Dixville Notch was created for the sole purpose of turning the Balsams resort into a voting location. Neil Tillotson, the hotel’s owner, won free advertising for the resort, and journalists took advantage of the in-house telephone company to deliver the town’s real, albeit statistically insignificant, vote tally 12 hours before exit polls from elsewhere in the country began to trickle in.
— Christopher Maag, "First U.S. Election Result Is In, and It’s a Trump-Harris Tie," The New York Times
... in the world ...
— Jessy Lu, part of an eloquent sentence I tried to write down but now can't read
You're the whole banana split. Hold the peanuts.
— Lily to Wally
The baby stuff does take over doesn't it.
— David