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Reading Week #33 – Hiya Pals

12.05.2014 by Nicola //

Xmas Tree | @robotnic
The tree is UP! (Pic from last year because I need more tinsel.)

Hiya, pals!

It’s December aka Pantomime Season so I had to get that one out of my system.

I’ve not much chat this week. Had my head down and aiming for a final workday this month of Monday 22 December. Freelancer naïvety or solid goal? We’ll soon find out.

Meantime, there’s plenty reading to be done.

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

Yesterday I reviewed the week’s big, non Madagascar franchise releases on the BBC Culture Studio: Black Sea, St Vincent, and Men Women and Children. Click through to listen on iPlayer catch-up.
 

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

In the Hollywood Reporter: Chris Rock Pens Blistering Essay on Hollywood’s Race Problem: “It’s a White Industry”

The reading lists are out!

NPR’s Best Books of 2014 is just the most.

These lists are dime a dozen but I’ll also throw in Maria Popova of Brainpickings’ 2014’s Best Books on Psychology, Philosophy, and How to Live Meaningfully.

Okay, one more. BUT LOOK AT THE TOP COMMENT. UGH. A Year in Reading by Emily Gould, in The Millions.

 

 

–– DIGITAL ––

Podcast: Ira Glass was the first guest on the new season of Alec Baldwin’s show Here’s the Thing. Quality listening.

A tweet from Jess Furseth (click for great link list) reminded me to recommend the Longform App.

Finally downloaded the Longform reader app and it's soooo clever. The combination of RSS and curation! Game-changer.

— Jess Furseth (@jessicafurseth) December 4, 2014

 

Hank Green says You Can’t Make it On YouTube Anymore. And he would know.

People who are new to the medium are starting to think that online video is not “Just a little bit better than everything else on YouTube” but “Just a little bit worse than everything on TV.”

 

32 Things We Need Words For In 2015.

 

 

–– LADYBITS ––

Why Mockingjay is the “End of Men” Movie of the Year. “Mansplaining jokes have reached Hollywood blockbusters.”

Bondage, birth control and the suffragettes: Meet the real Wonder Woman. I have total superhero fatigue and wasn’t that curious about the release of this book. After this piece, I am.

Feminist Frequency released 25 Invisible Benefits of Gaming While Male [VIDEO].

 

 

–– ON PAPER ––

In Cold Blood by Truman Capote. Again. I will finish it this time!

I also read Mongol by Uuganaa Ramsay, which I mentioned last week. Not as political as I expected but a touching, straight-forward autobiography that deftly bridges cultures.

What are you reading this holiday season?

 

 

–– &c. ––

Chris Rock again. This time he talks about Ferguson, Cosby, and What ‘Racial Progress’ Really Means in Vulture. Mind-blowing point: black progress isn’t about black progress, it’s about white progress.

Related: The Other Side of Diversity by EricaJoy on Medium.

A eulogy for RadioShack, the panicked and half-dead retail empire. Disgusting and funny and fascinating all at once.

 

What have you been reading this week?

 

 

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Categories // Reading Week Tags // best books of 2014, chris rock, hank green, helen o'hara, link list, reading week

Reading Week #32

11.28.2014 by Nicola //

Scottish Borders Sunset | @robotnic

 
Hello, hello! Reading Week has returned.

Last week I spent 3 days in the Borders working on my business plans. It was good to get out of the office (and, indeed, the city) for a few days.

Now I’m back and hope you’re having a happy Thanksgiving week, whether you celebrate it or not.

On with the links!

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

I wrote a response to my reading of Not That Kind of Girl by Lena Dunham. I’m sure you’re as sick of her as I am, so for this I do apologise.

On my business blog:
What Serial Can Teach You About Content Marketing

The VATMOSS VAT Mess – a piece about the new ruling that removes the VAT exemption for automated online sales in the EU… which I learned about after spending 3 days developing that part of my business. Aiiiee!

 

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

Talking with the authors of Gone Girl and Wild. Great interview, which also confirms Reece Witherspoon’s hefty role in getting more women on screen. More on this in Ladybits below…

Mockingjay’s Contradictory Revolution by Sady Doyle. Great piece, though I do admire literature that challenges the mainstream while conforming to it, because how else can we get these issues into the mainstream?

Notes on Vape – the Oxford English Dictionary’s word of 2014. I’m into it.

In video, Stevie aka SableCaught’s Enter Three Witches | Reading Shakespeare is truly delightful.

Ursula K Le Guin’s speech at National Book Awards: ‘Books aren’t just commodities’. Also delightful!

 

 

–– DIGITAL ––

A couple of my favourite podcasters re-emerged this week! They once hosted TL;DR, which ended a few weeks back. Now it turns out they’re the first new podcast from Gimlet Media aka the guys from StartUp. This is getting confusing, isn’t it? Anyway, check out their excellent new show about the internet: Reply All. (And go back and listen to the TL;DR back catalogue, it’s brilliant.)

Contently has some ideas about The Business Model That Will Save Journalism. (That’s Journalism with a capital J.) An interesting read, and just idealistic enough if you ask me.

 

 

–– LADYBITS ––

Where Are All The Leading Ladies? In which we learn that women only 15% of leads – a number that has stagnated since the 1940s. 50+ years! While I’ve felt increasingly disenchanted and disenfranchised by cinema lately, these are the ways that we women need to be speaking up and providing perspective. Good job, Helen O’Hara, and on a site called That Film Guy, no less! [ETA: Page no longer exists.]

In related news: Women on film, sci-fi edition: it gets dystopian by Bidisha in Sight & Sound.

While ‘Ladybits’ is usually a fun approach to what I’m reading re issues of women in culture, there are some dark discussions happening lately. Not least Rolling Stone’s A Rape on Campus: A Brutal Assault and Struggle for Justice at UVA. It’s a tough but hugely worthwhile read – please do if you can.

 

 

–– ON PAPER ––

I finally got around to finishing The Empathy Exams by Leslie Jamison – and it’s fantastic. It’ll be the next post in The Essayist Project.

This and a light read, The Rosie Project, were the final 2 reads of my 52 Book Challenge. For the rest of the year I plan to re-read some Nora Ephron, then get to picking up some more Joan Didion and some miscellaneous fiction from the old TBR.

I’m also looking forward to reading Mongol by Uuganaa Ramsay – an writer who was raised in Mongolia but now lives in Scotland and who has been exploring the use of the word Mongol in our culture. Thanks to Saraband Books for sending me a copy.

What are you reading this holiday season?

 

 

–– &c. ––

In the wake of events in Ferguson, and now across many more US cities and beyond, Franchesca of chescaleigh gives 5 Tips for Being an Ally.

Extreme Wealth Is Bad for Everyone — Especially the Wealthy. In which Michael Lewis out-writes, like, everyone. In a book review.

 

What have you been reading this week?

 

 

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Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, reading week, reply all

Reading Week #31

11.14.2014 by Nicola //

I made a new kitten buddy this week. Can I has?
I made a new kitten buddy this week. Can I has?

 
This week I have become a licensed driver! Not too shabby.

Other than that, I have been mostly trying to work ahead before some fair travels next week. Enjoy this Reading Week while it lasts – there may not be one next week.

Still, there’s lots on the internet to enjoy. Here’s a wee smattering.

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

Nothing new here, but remember how I wrote a book?

The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part I is out on Monday, and Christmas is coming up, so why not buy yourself or someone you know a lovely copy of Fan Phenomena: The Hunger Games, penned by yours truly?

 

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

Andrew O’Hagan writes about the joys of A Hotel Room of One’s Own. This appealed because I’ll have one for a few days next week – possibly only the second hotel room I’ve ever had all to myself.

Tim Robey asked Keira Knightley, “Where are the films about female geniuses?”. Spoiler alert: she hasn’t been offered any. I’d love to see one about Ada Byron, Countess of Lovelace. (Yes, that Byron.)

 

 

–– DIGITAL ––

How Fangirlsdom Changed The Future of Publishing. There, I fixed it for you.

In case you’re not sick of it yet: more on Serial and its approach to objectivity. Further proof that today’s audiences love it when you show your work and share your process.

And here’s one more by Michelle Dean on Serial’s ethical issues.
 

 

–– LADYBITS ––

An oldie and a goodie: Anne Helen Petersen on Jennifer Lawrence and the History of Cool Girls. Petersen’s book Scandals of Classic Hollywood is a great read, too.

The ever-excellent Hannah McGill takes a look at gender depiction in sci-fi ahead of a new film season in Glasgow.

Keira Knightley posed topless in Interview magazine – in protest. She tells the Telegraph more, saying: “I think women’s bodies are a battleground and photography is partly to blame,” and “it does feel important to say it really doesn’t matter what shape you are.” Girl!

VIDEO: Why is Zero a Size Tho? Laci is just the best.
 

 

–– ON PAPER ––

Looking Glass Books Haul | @robotnic

This past week I finished Wild by Cheryl Strayed (decent) and essays by Jorge Luis Borges – and immediately bought some more (pictured). I also picked up Teju Cole’s first novel, Open City.

Other than that, I’m still slowly making my way through Leslie Jamison’s excellent The Empathy Exams.

What are you reading this season?

 

 

–– &c. ––

The Rosetta mission has detected a mysterious signal coming from Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Cool! Maybe it’s The Clangers.

Buuuut, here on earth, lots of us have a problem with the Rosetta scientist’s choice of shirt. Oy.

Good for a giggle: a Redditor asks Glaswegians why they chant “Billy, Billy, Billy fucking Joel” at gigs.
 

What have you been reading this week?

 

 

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Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, reading week

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