Franz Liszt - Hamlet

Oct. 9th, 2025 05:00 am
[syndicated profile] mpr_daily_download_feed

Franz Liszt - Hamlet


New Zealand Symphony Orchestra


Michael Halasz, conductor


More info about today’s track: Naxos 8.553355


Courtesy of Naxos of America Inc.



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Administrative Note

Oct. 9th, 2025 04:16 am
[syndicated profile] naomikritzer_feed

Posted by naomikritzer

I believe I have blogged about every race happening in Minneapolis and St. Paul this fall. I was in a hurry to get it done this year because I am going to be teaching at a Science Fiction workshop in Chongqing, China. I am super excited about this, but it also means I’m going to be on a very different schedule for the next couple of weeks, and whether I’m able to even get to my blog to edit it remains to be seen. (Yes, I have a VPN. Will it work? I am not going to know until I get to China!) Also: I’m going to be teaching at a workshop, and want to devote the bulk of my energy and attention to my students.

All this means that if there’s some late-breaking scandal, I may not be able to update my post about the relevant race! I will try to weigh in on anything significant after I get back. I will also assemble my directory of posts after I get back; in the meantime if you’re looking for a particular race, stick the most distinctive candidate’s name in the “search” field in the upper right-hand corner and it should turn up. (I use search here a lot. It’s how I find what I said about candidates in the past.)

[syndicated profile] naomikritzer_feed

Posted by naomikritzer

The incumbent, Melvin Carter, is running again and is endorsed by the DFL. On the ballot:

Melvin Carter (incumbent)
Kaohly Her
Yan Chen
Adam Dullinger
Mike Hilborn

This is a ranked-choice election and St. Paul lets you rank five candidates, so you can literally rate these candidates in order of preference, if you want.

I need to get this done ASAP: it’s my last post and I’m about to leave town. I’ve been having trouble getting motivated to do this one for reasons that are summed up well in a conversation I had tonight with my father. He asked me when I was going to do the St. Paul mayoral race and I told him I was working on it. I then told him that the only person with any real shot at beating Melvin was Kaohly Her, and he grabbed a pen to write down the name. Bad news for people who hate Melvin: if, a month out from the election, reasonably politically engaged St. Paul residents are not even aware of the name of Melvin’s main opponent, this is not much of a contest.

I mean, get out there and vote, please, whether you love Melvin or hate him or feel “eh, I mean, he’s okay?” about him, because we need your votes on the two ballot questions (vote yes on both).

tl;dr I’m going to vote for Melvin. If you don’t like Melvin you should rank Kaohly Her and Yan Chen.

Mike Hilborn

Mike Hilborn owns an exterior services business that does stuff like powerwashing. I e-mailed him to ask him if he had any endorsements or any governance experience (like, had he ever served on a city board or committee or a county advisory board or attended city council meetings as an observer)? He does not. “I do not have any endorsements.  I don’t seek them.  Endorsements come with strings to promote their agenda.  My agenda is to lower taxes, crime and homelessness.  I do not have any government experience.  I have spent the last 30 years focused on growing my business.  We are a second chance employer with 45 employees.  I’m at the point in my career where I have time to see if can save our city.  I believe my business experience is what is required to fix Saint Paul.”

I disagree that running a small business is (all by itself) adequate preparation for the job of mayor. (I also don’t know that Melvin Carter would be qualified to take over a 45-employee exterior services business. At the very least I would have a bunch of questions about whether he’s run a small business in the past and how much he knows about power washing; his Wikipedia entry does not lead me to believe that he has any relevant experience in that area.)

He also had Republican vibes and sure enough, Open Secrets showed donations to Tim Pawlenty and the Minnesota GOP. He also gave a rousing defense of ICE at one of the forums. I would not rank Hilborn.

Adam Dullinger

Adam is an engineer (he makes firefighting equipment, I think for this company) and has no endorsements or political experience. He is very earnest (though he got scolded at a mayoral forum for his lack of civility) and given his genuine interests in city design particularly as it applies to bikes, I think he should consider applying to one of the the city advisory boards. (Among other things, I genuinely think this would be a better fit for the information deep dives he wants to do than the mayor’s job.) I do not think he’s qualified to be mayor, though I’d take him over Mike.

Yan Chen

Yan Chen is a retired science professor who ran for City Council in 2023. Last time she picked up a second-choice endorsement from a labor coalition, and this time she’s co-endorsed with Kaohly by former City Council rep Jane Prince. When I asked her about her governance experience, she said that she had attended City Council meetings multiple times, had visited every district council, was a board member of Summit University District Council until she withdrew to run for office, and is a community board member for a public charter school (Career Pathways). That’s actually pretty solid from a “does this person have any real idea what this sort of job entails” perspective.

She really loves to post videos and I really hate to watch videos but I watched enough to be reassured that she is not secretly a Republican despite her focus on property taxes. I am unconvinced that she’d do a better job than Melvin, but if you’re unhappy and feeling like you want a change (any change) she’s worth ranking.

Kaohly Her

Kaohly Her is a State House Rep for 64A (a section of the middle of the western part of the city). She did an interview with WedgeLive and my primary takeaway from it is that she’d do basically the same stuff Melvin is doing but she’s pretty sure she’d do it better.

Asked about the Summit Trail thing, she said the process was flawed, which … I don’t know, honestly, I feel like there are some real problems with the communication around that project but I don’t think that means that the project is a bad idea. (I wrote about this project in my Ward 4 post a few months ago, here.) The way she talks about this project makes me worry that she will cave to pressure from NIMBYs to the detriment of everyone in St. Paul. She also talked about this bike trail like it’s an amenity for the people who live on Summit. It’s really not; the whole point of a regional trail is to provide a really good, pleasant, well-maintained trail that people can use for both recreational travel and bike commuting and Summit is terrific for this for anyone who needs to get between downtown and the river and a ton of people use Summit (for driving, biking, and walking) as their preferred route just because it’s nice. (This was the thing Adam got scolded over, incidentally; he said her answer was bullshit.)

That said: she would bring good relationships with the legislature and she clearly has the experience to do the job. I like her fine and she’d probably be a reasonably decent mayor. I’m just really not convinced she’d actually do better than Melvin.

Melvin Carter

Melvin’s WedgeLive interview is also worth watching or listening to. He has one really interesting moment where he talks about how one of the aspects of unidentified, masked ICE officers is that we had a political assassination in this state a few months back committed by a masked guy pretending to be law enforcement.

Melvin has done an outstanding job on one particular thing, which is gun violence in St. Paul — basically he worked with the police department to have them investigate non-fatal shootings with the same energy they bring to murders. This has made a massive difference in the number of shootings. I’m also happy with what he’s done with municipal garbage collection. Homeless encampments in St. Paul are dealt with by an outreach team and while they pop up from time to time this is more or less what I think most Minneapolis advocates would say is the right way to deal with encampments. (I ran searches in the Minneapolis and St. Paul subreddits to see how much people are talking about encampments and in St. Paul they mostly just are not, which is funny given that r/stpaul really hates Melvin and thinks he sucks. Or at least that’s the direction of the threads on the mayoral race.)

St. Paul’s downtown is ailing but it’s dealing with the central problem of downtowns everywhere, a reduced in-office work force. Property taxes are high, and this is a problem that is largely created by the fact that huge sections of St. Paul are owned by the government (because it’s the state capital) or a large nonprofit organization (we’ve got a truly ridiculous number of colleges) and are thus not taxable; the fall in commercial property values in downtown is a major contributing factor and this not a problem that’s going to get solved as quickly as would be nice. It’s annoying to start a business in St. Paul (Minneapolis has this same issue) and they should rethink some of the regulations; I’ll put that on Melvin. Kaohly Her says that Cub says that nobody at City Hall took their calls; Melvin says this is bullshit (except he was more polite about it than Adam) and that they complained a lot about shoplifting but then never called 911 when it was actually happening.

Fundamentally I think Melvin has done a pretty good job of fixing the stuff that he could fix. In the coming four years (because as noted, I think he’s going to win) I hope he’ll bring some of that energy to dealing with the Snelling-University vacant CVS (is that a pet peeve of mine? I mean yeah but I think it pisses off everyone who regularly passes that intersection. Seriously, what the hell) and those vacant buildings on Grand that the Ohio teacher’s retirement fund is basically just sitting on and leaving empty.

A final strategic note: Melvin’s father was a cop, and it’s pretty clear that he has a good relationship with the SPPD, enough that he was able to get them to aggressively investigate non-fatal shootings. In the current political environment, I can think of worse things than a progressive mayor who can successfully tell the cops to do stuff.

Anyway, I am currently planning to rank Melvin #1 (and Kaohly #2, and Yan Chen #3, even though I don’t think those rankings will matter.) If you’re unhappy with Melvin, I think Kaohly would make a fine mayor.


I have a new book coming out next June! This one is not YA; it’s a near-future thriller about an obstetrician who gets kidnapped by a cult because they want someone on site to deliver babies. You can pre-order it right now if you want.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. (An early donor to the fundraiser added a comment: “YouthLink was incredible instrumental in my assistance of a friend to escape a bad family situation in Florida with little more than a computer and a state ID. Thanks to YouthLink and their knowledge of resources my friend was able to get a mailing address (which was essential in getting a debit card and formal identification documents), healthcare, hot meals, an internship at a local company, and even furniture for their new apartment.” — That is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about!)

Health (good news)

Oct. 8th, 2025 08:08 pm
azurelunatic: Karkat Vantas yelling. His shirt has the astrological sign Cancer in grey. (Karkat Yell)
[personal profile] azurelunatic
My immunotherapy infusion yesterday may have been my last!! I have a scan on Monday that will probably say that. Belovedest celebrated by cracking into the Strategic Redpop Reserve. This will mean much more leeway to leave town and such.

Colonoscopy results: mostly normal, one pre (not sure how many pre-s to put here) cancerous "lesion", and all of them removed. Repeat in two years, this time with Extended Prep. (My understanding of "lesion" and the medical definition may not align entirely well.)

Started the new injectable after the colonoscopy. I can definitely feel the impact. It remains to be seen exactly what kind. One of my friends has a new injectable too; she's getting some sinus clearance from it. Of all the random effects.

After the infusion, Belovedest and I trekked up-city to pick up a package for [personal profile] alexseanchai. All Pampered Chef, and a high proportion of likely goodies vs. likely duds. There were some varying scrub brushes. The utensil/knife scrub brush looks like dentures that are actually a scrub brush, but I can see that coming in handy. There was also a quarter-sheet pan with two eighth-sheet pans. And then we trekked back down when Belovedest realized they'd left their tablet at the cancer center. Freakin' ADHD. We're on The Assassins of Thasalon in our progress through Penric.

I have a smallish makeup hobby. Part of that is sometimes going all Weird Barbie on my face with eyeliner or whatever. Tonight I've convinced myself (via iridescent green eyeliner) that some kind of moon phase forehead jewelry might really slap.

Cubs Win!

Oct. 8th, 2025 10:33 pm
billroper: (Default)
[personal profile] billroper
The Cubs beat the Brewers tonight by a final of 4-3 so they survive for another day.

They scored four in the first, chasing the Brewers' starting pitcher, Quinn Priester, who had been quite good for them, but not tonight. The offense then pretty much went to sleep for the rest of the game, leaving the pitching staff to nurse what started as a 4-1 lead to the end of the game.

Remarkably, this trick worked.

Tomorrow's game is a night game, so I am hoping that the remote parking lot is open. :)
brooksmoses: (Default)
[personal profile] brooksmoses
Chris Hallbeck posted a cute little short that involves the Monty Hall Paradox at https://www.youtube.com/shorts/At_LNDO1eq0, and it includes an explanation of the result that has a lot of people saying "I finally understand it!" in comments. And, after watching it and reading some comments, I think I have an even more intuitive explanation.

The paradox is this: In front of you is a game show host, and three doors. Behind one of the doors is a Shiny New Car, or some other great prize that you may win. Behind the other two doors are goats. You select a door. The host then opens one of the doors that you didn't select, revealing a goat, and then offers you an choice: Do you keep the door you selected first, or do you switch to the other door that they didn't open? If the door you select (either by keeping your first selection or switching to the other one) is the one with the prize, you win the prize!

If your door contains the goat, my understanding is that you do not actually get to keep the goat.

(A key datapoint -- often omitted from the descriptions! -- is that this is how the process always goes, and you know that fact. The host will always open a door with a goat, and will always offer the opportunity to switch. This is not a case where the host is being devious and only trying to get you to switch away if you start out choosing the prize.)

The paradoxical result is that switching will lead to the prize twice as often as not-switching, even though it looks like a random choice between two doors that you have no information about.

Explanation behind cut.... )

My Chief Complaint

Oct. 9th, 2025 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read My Chief Complaint

My coworker is on the phone with our boss.
Coworker: "So, I just wanted to say I don't appreciate being called nicknames when in the meetings. It's not professional."
Pause.
Coworker: "Things like sport, chief, and so on."

Read My Chief Complaint

Better Luck Tomorrow

Oct. 8th, 2025 10:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Better Luck Tomorrow

Me: "Hey, [Coworker], what time is it?"
Coworker: "You want to know now?"
Me: *Sarcastic.* "No, I want to know the time yesterday."

Read Better Luck Tomorrow

[syndicated profile] sharonlee_feed

Posted by Sharon

What went before: I think I may have wrassled a working book outta The System. I’ll check again when I get home after needlework.

In the meantime, the hospital decided it had been coy enough and decided to Reveal that it had the orders for the xray of my spine, which — three weeks in the making! — took 15 minutes.

It is, however, done, and I now have tomorrow, most of Thursday, all of Friday to do writing and other needed tasks here at the Confusion Factory. That is, of course, unless I decide that I really have to go to the ocean on Friday. Because a drive to the ocean is always in order.

It is very warm outside in the world. While I was out, I filled up the car and bought nine! dollars! worth of California grapes. I gotta start watching prices closer.

So, I’m checking out for the day.

Y’all stay safe. I’ll see you tomorrow.
#
And the work day commences.  The goal is 1,000 words.  My supervisor is skeptical:

#
Wednesday. Rainy, cool, and gloomy.

Had to frog a scene and rewrite. New material is up for this afternoon. Did a load of wash, because I could.

Taking a break now to make ham and bean soup for lunch — ref rainy, cool, gloomy — and glare at my email.

Got the results of my spine xray and my bloodwork back. I would like to talk to my doctor about what these things mean — remember when you could talk to your doctor on the phone? — but I guess I’ll wait until December.

In slightly better news, I do have a PT appointment in mid-November — in Oakland! (aka 3 miles from my house; 6 mile RT). I was pretty sure I was going to have to drive to Augusta (aka 40 miles RT) for PT, so that was a nice medical surprise. I’m hoping that the therapist and I can put her heads together and get a long-term fix that doesn’t require surgery, because we’re avoiding surgery, we are. With bells on.

The cats have each checked in with me this morning, and Rookie did an hour of supervision at the beginning of the shift, but apparently rewriting is boring.

It looks like, if I’m going to the ocean, Friday is my bet, before next week’s nor’easter. Friday drive to the ocean is therefore inked in for Friday.

So! For those reading along: How ’bout that Bubo? Pretty dern bold, I thought him. Or perhaps I mean foolhardy.

What’s the weather where you are?

A Fitting Solution

Oct. 8th, 2025 05:55 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read A Fitting Solution

This employee, we’ll call him Paul, works remotely and never answers his emails or phone. There was an audit I was working on, and I realized about sixty employees needed to sign a form, so fifty-nine of them signed it within the week, and Paul never answered me. I called and emailed him for about three months until he finally sent it back.

Read A Fitting Solution

Gloomy ol' day with writing and soup

Oct. 8th, 2025 02:49 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

What went before: I think I may have wrassled a working book outta The System. I'll check again when I get home after needlework.

In the meantime, the hospital decided it had been coy enough and decided to Reveal that it had the orders for the xray of my spine, which -- three weeks in the making! -- took 15 minutes.

It is, however, done, and I now have tomorrow, most of Thursday, all of Friday to do writing and other needed tasks here at the Confusion Factory. That is, of course, unless I decide that I really have to go to the ocean on Friday. Because a drive to the ocean is always in order.

It is very warm outside in the world. While I was out, I filled up the car and bought nine! dollars! worth of California grapes. I gotta start watching prices closer.

So, I'm checking out for the day.

Y'all stay safe. I'll see you tomorrow.
#
And the work day commences.  The goal is 1,000 words.  My supervisor is skeptical:

#
Wednesday. Rainy, cool, and gloomy.

Had to frog a scene and rewrite. New material is up for this afternoon. Did a load of wash, because I could.

Taking a break now to make ham and bean soup for lunch -- ref rainy, cool, gloomy -- and glare at my email.

Got the results of my spine xray and my bloodwork back. I would like to talk to my doctor about what these things mean -- remember when you could talk to your doctor on the phone? -- but I guess I'll wait until December.

In slightly better news, I do have a PT appointment in mid-November -- in Oakland! (aka 3 miles from my house; 6 mile RT). I was pretty sure I was going to have to drive to Augusta (aka 40 miles RT) for PT, so that was a nice medical surprise. I'm hoping that the therapist and I can put her heads together and get a long-term fix that doesn't require surgery, because we're avoiding surgery, we are. With bells on.

The cats have each checked in with me this morning, and Rookie did an hour of supervision at the beginning of the shift, but apparently rewriting is boring.

It looks like, if I'm going to the ocean, Friday is my bet, before next week's nor'easter. Friday drive to the ocean is therefore inked in for Friday.

So! For those reading along: How 'bout that Bubo? Pretty dern bold, I thought him. Or perhaps I mean foolhardy.

What's the weather where you are?


mrissa: (Default)
[personal profile] mrissa
 New story! What a Big Heart You Have is out in Kaleidotrope. The more I thought about the Red Riding Hood story, the more I thought that the grandmother/granddaughter relationship was pretty sketched-in...and it's been one of the most important ones in my life. Hope you enjoy.

Bundle of Holding: Mystery Flesh Pit

Oct. 8th, 2025 02:15 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Welcome, visitor, to Mystery Flesh Pit National Park: The RPG, the Cypher System tabletop roleplaying game rulebook from Ganza Gaming about the Permian Basin Superorganism.

Bundle of Holding: Mystery Flesh Pit

October country

Oct. 8th, 2025 10:46 am
[syndicated profile] lois_mcmaster_bujold_feed
Time for my annual pitch for The Hallowed Hunt as a suitably spooky autumn-themed read...



Unlike the protagonists of the other two books in the Chalion trio (to which this is NOT a sequel -- it takes place a couple of centuries earlier in another country) grumpy main character Ingrey kin Wolfcliff does not become a five-gods-style saint in the course of his adventures, but rather, a [spoiler], if only for one harrowing night. Very different job description.

Some of its matters do reconnect with Penric & Desdemona in "Penric and the Shaman", if one wants some worldbuilding cross-illumination.


https://www.amazon.com/Hallowed-Hunt-... among other sources. Also in audio wherever Blackstone markets.

Happy Halloween reading!

Ta, L.

(I tried to mask a spoiler, above, as per the Goodreads formatting tips <spoiler> word </spoiler> but according to the Preview function it just appeared as plain text anyway. If anyone knows the trick of this, shout out in the comments.)

posted by Lois McMaster Bujold on October, 08

Triplicate Means Three, Do You Copy?

Oct. 8th, 2025 04:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Triplicate Means Three, Do You Copy?

Office HR Worker: "Hi, just to make it clear, we need those in triplicate. Triplicate means three."
Me: "Would you like me to print them out when I come in? I thought you needed these ASAP?"
Office HR Worker: "We do. Please send two more copies."

Read Triplicate Means Three, Do You Copy?

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