Is there anything good to watch ?

If your household is anything like mine most evening include the question : “What are we going to watch ?” After becoming cord cutters, the question seems to come up more regularly than in the days of cable television when the shows and movies were spoonfed. An excellent new website offers simple solutions to the problem with listings for hundreds of vetted films and television shows.

A Good Movie to Watch offers a large and growing collection of movie and TV show recommendations curated by humans, not algorithms. Everything on this website will have at least a 70% user score (7/10 on IMDb for example), combined with a 70% critic approval score (on Rotten Tomatoes). “Every streaming service, every genre, every mood. Our team of experts meticulously pick the best for you, with new recommendations coming in all the time.”

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The infinite reading list

 

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Do vampires get sea sick ?

On a gloomy night in July, 1893, Bram Stoker’s mysterious Count Dracula embarked on a clandestine journey from his Transylvania home aboard the ill-fated ship Demeter. Unbeknownst to the unsuspecting crew of the Demeter, a malevolent force lay hidden in the ship’s hold—a coffin filled with the cursed soil of Dracula’s homeland, concealing the vampire lord himself.

By the time the Demeter’s ghostly silhouette loomed over the shores of Whitby, it carried with it a cargo of death. The once bustling ship had become a floating tomb, with the captain, the sole survivor, lashed to the ship’s wheel in a desperate bid to maintain control over the vessel.

You can follow Count Dracula’s frightening trip from Transylvania to England for yourself on a new interactive book map of the novel. Dracula: The Map is a project by Morgan Bishop, which plots all the locations mentioned in Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Using the ‘Character Routes’ drop-down menu you can select to view an interactive map of the journeys undertaken by each of the five main characters in the novel; Count Dracula, Jonathan Harker, his fiancée Mina Murray, Dr. Seward and Dr. Van Helsing.

The arrival of the Demeter in Bram Stoker’s Dracula serves as an important piece  the vampire’s story: the ship brings death himself to England. Stoker drew inspiration for his genre-defining horror novel from his time in Whitby, and the tragic 1885 fate of the real ship Dmitry on the town’s shore.

The death and tragedy around Stoker ultimately shaped the story that became one of the most famous pieces of English literature and set the stage for the next century of vampire lore.

During the summer of 1890, Irish novelist Bram Stoker vacationed at the seaside town of Whitby in northeast England. Despite spending only a month in the town, Stoker was enthralled by his surroundings: grand mansions and hotels lined the West Cliff while remains of the seventh century Whitby Abbey towered over the East Cliff. Nearby, the cemetery at the Parish Church also served as inspiration as the story of Dracula came to life.

Stoker was also fascinated by the many ships making harbor here. He reportedly visited the Whitby Museum to explore the history of these vessels. The author reportedly asked around the harbor about shipwrecks in Whitby, notably the Dmitry, a ship that had wrecked five years earlier.

The cargo vessel Dmitry had set sail from Narva, Russia in 1885. On October 24, the Dmitry was one of two ships run ashore at Whitby by “a storm of great violence,” according to contemporary newspaper accounts. The other vessel, the Mary and Agnes, was stranded in the raging sea and a lifeboat was sent to rescue its crew.

There were some aspects of the last voyage of the Dmitry that appear to have stood out to Stoker. The Demeter originated in Varna (an anagram for Narva, where the Dmitry originated), and similarly carried “ballast of silver sand, with only a small amount of cargo—a number of great wooden boxes filled with mould.”

In the novel, Dracula took the form of a dog to make his way from the Demeter to dry land, but there was no dog reported to have been on the Dmitry. In the novel,  “The very instant the shore was touched, an immense dog sprang up on deck from below, as if shot up by the concussion, and running forward, jumped from the bow on the sand.”

The dog, a disguised Dracula, wrought bloodshed and death from that point forward. This dog resembled the barghest, a mythical monster often associated with Yorkshire. Spellings and specific forms of barghest vary but the dog-like being foretold of pain, disaster, or even death to all who saw it. The barghest also elicited howling from dogs in its vicinity, something Dracula protagonist Mina Murray reported took place soon after the arrival of the Demeter.

 

 

 

The journey maps in Dracula: The Map were all created using Knight Lab’s popular StoryMapJS format.

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Murakami in the Machine or Way back Wednesday

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In the past we’ve covered lots of book vending machine stories, but this one is surreal. The Muzu publishing house in Poland created three vending machines to dispense Polish translations of Haruki Murakami’s newest novel, Colourless Tsukuru Tazaki and the Year of His Pilgrimage. These vending machines will be set up in train stations located in Warsaw, Poznan, and Wroclaw Poland. The blockbuster book first came out in Murakami’s native Japan back in April 2013. Knopf, an imprint at Penguin Random House, will release the English language version, translated by Japanese literature expert Philip Gabriel, on August 12, 2014.

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The train station connection to the novel is based on the main character’s job of designing railway stations in Tokyo.

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Chill Out

Summer has arrived early in my little corner of the Western Hemisphere and with the wilting heat my thoughts turn to the far North. Coincidentally, the world’s largest and most northern national park is celebrating its 50th anniversary.

Kalaallit Nunaanni nuna eqqissisimatitaq, or Grønlands Nationalpark) occupies nearly 30% of Greenland and is larger than Tanzania. In fact, the park is larger than 166 of the world’s nations.  It is the northernmost national park in the world and the second-largest by area of any second-level subdivision of any country in the world, trailing only the Qikiqtaaluk Region in Nunavut, Canada.

Founded in May, 1974 and expanded in 1988 to protect nearly a million square kilometers in the northeastern part of the island, Grønlands Nationalpark  has no permanent human population. It is also the least visited national park in the world.

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War is not an adventure…

“War is not an adventure. It is a disease.” Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

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Doing it old school

I’ve shared stories about the beloved Arion Press, including a visit to their San Francisco home by Anthony Bourdain in 2015 for a online series called Raw Craft . I recently spotted  a video from Business Insider’s Still Standing series which profiled Arion as well.

 

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a mystery wrapped in an enigma in a vending machine

I love a good European train station story, and I’m always down for a wacky vending machine tale, if you mash the two together I have to share the tale. It seems that the central train station in the charming southwestern German university city of Freiburg has installed an unusual vending machine.

The machine dispenses packages that contain returned merchandise from online retailers such as Aliexpress and Temu. It is much too expensive to ship the merchandise back to the retailer (usually in China), so the retailer sells the merchandise to their a fulfillment center that in turn resells it to liquidators, in this case the vending machine owner. Oddly, the packages are sold with the shipping label on them.

 

 

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seulement des affiches

 

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Bookstore Tourism

Bookstar in San Diego, California is no ordinary bookshop. The 1945 Point Loma Theater was rescued from the wrecking ball by the Barnes & Noble chain. The theaters adaptive reuse capitalized on the existing theaters circulation path including the recreation of the historic carpet, and was augmented by imagery drawn from the existing deco architecture, marine nature of San Diego and literary references.

The Loma is interesting in that it was designed by one of the most prominent theater architects on the West Coast,  S. Charles Lee, who designed everything from LA’s terra-cotta Tower Theatre (now home to an Apple store) to Hollywood’s historic Max Factor Building, which currently houses the Hollywood Museum.

Opened in 1945, the Loma was a Streamline Moderne single-screen. The building was later on the verge of demolition when then-Barnes & Noble subsidiary Bookstar stepped in to save it, transforming it into a bookstore in 1989.

Although the theater’s 1,188 seats are long gone, its former screen is said to be intact, and the one-time snack bar is now the store’s checkout counter. Even the theater’s stunning exterior signage—including the marquee and a neon blade sign that spells out “LOMA”—remains.

I have never been to San Diego, but Bookstar would be my first stop if I visited the city.

 

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