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There have been some interesting failures recently in Alzheimer’s trials. As long-time readers will know, I consider basically all Alzheimer’s drug trials to have failed to one degree or another, and particularly when it comes to clearing the “will improve patient’s lives in the real world without putting them at too much risk” hurdle. But these two are notable because they’re aimed outside the usual amyloid zone.

First off, Novo Nordisk reported that semaglutide (the company’s GLP-1 agonist drug, of course) failed in two Alzheimer’s trials. This was going to be a long shot, but long shots are worth taking in this area if you can afford to try them. Studies of thousands of patients with early cognitive impairment who took an oral form of semaglutide (Rybelsus, currently approved as a diabetes therapy) did not show improvements in mental function as compared to placebo. The company ways that the treatment group showed “improvement of Alzheimer’s disease-related biomarkers” in both trials, although it does not (as far as I can see) say what those biomarkers were. And I would wonder how good they are as indicators given that you can show improvements in them and still not beat placebo, personally.

The company’s stock took a hit on the news, which is kind of strange. Surely people weren’t betting on this succeeding? But Novo investors have been a jumpy bunch for a while now as Eli Lilly’s star continues to ascend in this area, so the sight of another possible  life preserver disappearing might have been enough by itself. At any rate, it does appear as if there’s a disease where GLP-1 drugs are not actually beneficial. Novo had some better news today, though, with a once-weekly shot/once-daily pill combination for amycretin, a dual GLP-1/amylin agonist. I see that people are not quite giving up on the GLP-1/Alzheimer’s idea, but it has to be considered an even longer shot than before.

There’s also new in the anti-tau protein area. That’s long been considered a possible Alzheimer’s target, and by “long” I mean decades. But it’s been hard to put that idea to the test in the clinic. Unfortunately, in the last couple of years it has been possible, and the results have not been good so far.  Early last year a Lilly candidate (LY3372689, ceperognastat) failed its own trial. Earlier this year Asceneuron halted work on its own oral anti-tau drug candidate (ASN51), and Biogen stopped BIIB113, another similar effort.

Now all of these are (were) O-GlcNAcase inhibitors, so you could easily make the case that the problem is that might not be a good mechanism to target tau, even if tau itself is a valid idea. But last year Roche bailed on a collaboration for an anti-tau antibody, which went on to fail its trials shortly afterwards. And the latest news is that J&J’s shot at an anti-tau antibody (posdinemab) has also failed its pivotal trial, with no efficacy seen in slowing the disease at the two-year mark. There are other tau programs that are now in the clinic, but they’re clearly going to have to bring something unusual to make you think that they will show interesting levels of efficacy at this point. Good luck, folks. . .

Daily Check-in

Nov. 25th, 2025 06:37 pm
starwatcher: Western windmill, clouds in background, trees around base. (Default)
[personal profile] starwatcher posting in [community profile] fandom_checkin
 
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Tuesday, November 25, to midnight on Wednesday, November 26. (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #33881 Daily Check-in
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 12

How are you doing?

I am OK.
8 (66.7%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now.
4 (33.3%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single.
5 (41.7%)

One other person.
5 (41.7%)

More than one other person.
2 (16.7%)




Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
 

30 in 30: Star Trek Novels

Nov. 25th, 2025 06:59 pm
senmut: A painted picture of Bones McCoy (Star Trek: Bones McCoy)
[personal profile] senmut
AO3 Link | Following the Fortunes of War: Chapter 4 (100 words) by Merfilly
Chapters: 6/6
Fandom: TOS - Dreadnought! - Diane Carey, TOS - Battlestations! - Diane Carey
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Piper/Sarda
Characters: Piper, Sarda, Judd "Scanner" Sandage, Merete AndrusTaurus
Additional Tags: Friendship, Slice of Life, POV First Person
Summary:

Various stories, following the friends from their novel adventures






Even I have my limits on 'winging it'. Scanner had been inventive, but we still had deteriorating dilithium crystals and were in, to use a Terran saying, B.F.E. near Gorn space.

I didn't lose my temper, something Sarda reassured me across our bond was for the best. I left the bridge, went down to our poor engineer, found Dyson had beat me there.

"Tell me what to do; Sarda has the conn."

"Aye aye captain," Skellus said, giving me tools and directions.

It was going to mean minimal power, and Scanner had saved us, but we'd get back to base.

Day 1771: "Standard negotiation."

Nov. 25th, 2025 04:23 pm
[syndicated profile] wtfjht_feed

Posted by Matt Kiser

Day 1771

🦃 Programming note: I’ll be publishing editions of WTFJHT on Monday and Tuesday this week. After that, I’m taking a short break for the holiday and will be back in your inbox on Monday, December 1st (unless, of course, something truly wtf-y demands otherwise). Thanks, as always, for reading and letting me be part of your news routine. I’m glad you’re here. -MATT

Send your thoughts, suggestions, or complaints to:
matt@whatthefuckjusthappenedtoday.com


Today in one sentence: The White House postponed its new Affordable Care Act subsidy plan after Speaker Mike Johnson said House Republicans wouldn’t support it; the FBI requested interviews with six Democratic members of Congress who appeared in a recent video telling U.S. troops and intelligence officials they can refuse unlawful orders; the U.S. said Ukraine agreed to a revised American-drafted peace plan to end Russia's war; U.S. consumer confidence fell in November to its lowest level since April; and Trump used his first White House turkey pardon of his second term to turn holiday ritual into criticizing Biden and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker.


1/ The White House postponed its new Affordable Care Act subsidy plan after Speaker Mike Johnson said House Republicans wouldn’t support it. The Trump administration had drafted a framework to extend the enhanced ACA subsidies for two years with new income caps, required minimum premium payments, tighter fraud controls, and options to route some aid into health savings accounts. Republicans, however, rejected the plan because it would still extend ACA subsidies they have long opposed, raised concerns about abortion coverage, and angered some lawmakers who said they first saw the proposal’s details on social media rather than from the administration. Subsidies are set to expire at the end of the year for more than 20 million people, and Democrats have warned that premiums will jump if Congress doesn’t act. (Wall Street Journal / New York Times / Politico / Bloomberg / CNN / USA Today / Associated Press / CBS News / Axios / CNBC)

2/ The FBI requested interviews with six Democratic members of Congress who appeared in a recent video telling U.S. troops and intelligence officials they can refuse unlawful orders. Neither the FBI nor the Justice Department has identified any specific crime they are investigating or brought formal charges, but Trump has called the lawmakers’ actions “seditious” and repeatedly suggested their behavior was “punishable by DEATH.” Federal law, however, sets a maximum 20-year sentence for seditious conspiracy. The lawmakers accused Trump of trying to “weaponize” the FBI to intimidate his political opponents, saying “the President directing the FBI to target us is exactly why we made this video in the first place.” Separately, the Pentagon opened an investigation into Sen. Mark Kelly, who officials said could be recalled to active duty for possible court martial over his role in the video. The Justice Department, meanwhile, said the FBI interviews are meant to determine “if there’s any wrongdoing, and then go from there.” (USA Today / Bloomberg / Reuters / Washington Post / Politico / ABC News / CNN / Associated Press / Axios)

  • Trump is reportedly considering firing FBI Director Kash Patel, frustrated by the negative reporting about his use of government jets and a special security detail for his girlfriend. The White House called the report “completely made up” while Trump said Patel was “doing a great job.” (MS Now)

3/ The U.S. said Ukraine agreed to a revised American-drafted peace plan to end Russia’s war. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and adviser Jared Kushner wrote the original 28-point framework, which was widely criticized in Ukraine and Europe as favoring Moscow, while consulting Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev in secret meetings in Miami, and Witkoff separately coached senior Putin aide Yuri Ushakov on how the Russian leader should pitch a matching “peace plan” to Trump. Asked about Witkoff’s approach, Trump called it a “standard negotiation.” After a week of talks in Geneva, Kyiv and Abu Dhabi, the plan has been cut to 19 points, dropping a proposed wartime amnesty, keeps Ukraine from expanding its roughly 800,000-strong army, and leaves decisions on territory and NATO membership to later talks among the presidents. President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine and the U.S. have a “common understanding” on core terms but stressed that “much work” remains, while Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov says Russia is still waiting for an “interim” text and warns it must reflect the “spirit and letter” of Trump’s Alaska meeting with Putin. Even so, Trump said there are “only a few remaining points of disagreement,” and that he will meet Putin and Zelensky only once a deal is in its final stages. Meanwhile, Russia’s latest missile and drone attacks killed at least seven people in Kyiv and three in southern Russia, which Zelensky and European leaders said undercut any serious push for peace. (ABC News / Washington Post / Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal / New York Times / NBC News / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / CNN / Bloomberg / Axios)

4/ U.S. consumer confidence fell in November to its lowest level since April as weaker job growth, stubborn inflation and the recent government shutdown weighed on Americans’ views of the economy. The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index dropped to 88.7 from 95.5 in October and its expectations gauge fell to 63.2, with fewer households planning to buy cars, homes and other big-ticket items. Shutdown-delayed Commerce Department data showed retail sales rose only 0.2% in September, below forecasts, as shoppers cut back on tariff-hit goods such as autos, electronics, clothing and online purchases while spending more at bars and restaurants, and core sales excluding autos, gasoline, building materials and food services fell 0.1%. A Labor Department report said producer prices increased 0.3% in September, led by higher energy and food costs, keeping inflation near 3% compared with the Federal Reserve’s 2% goal even as unemployment reached 4.4% and private employers cut an average of 13,500 jobs a week in early November. Economists, meanwhile, said tariffs, higher prices and a slowing labor market are squeezing many middle- and lower-income households even as higher-income consumers keep spending, warning that household finances are “more fragile than they were a few years ago.” (CNBC / Reuters / Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal / Reuters / Axios / Washington Post / Associated Press)

5/ Trump used his first White House turkey pardon of his second term to turn holiday ritual into criticizing Biden and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker. At the Rose Garden event, Trump claimed Biden’s 2024 turkey pardons were “totally invalid” because they were signed with an autopen and said he was now “officially pardoning” last year’s birds, Peach and Blossom, who were “on their way to be processed.” He “joked” that he almost named this year’s turkeys “Chuck and Nancy,” after Sen. Chuck Schumer and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, adding, “I would never pardon those two people.” Trump also mocked Pritzker’s appearance, saying, “I refuse to talk about the fact that he’s a fat slob,” before adding that he wanted to lose weight himself. (ABC News / NBC News / USA Today / CNBC / CNN / The Hill / Politico)

The 2026 midterms are in 343 days.


  • 🖤 A Black Friday “sale,” but pay-it-forward.

  • Ah yes, it’s that time of year when your inbox is full of discount codes to buy more stuff you don’t need. Regretfully, I don’t have anything to sell you.

  • But I do have a community to support. WTFJHT is free for all because not everyone has the time or money to spend on the news. The only reason that works is that about 2% of readers choose to pay it forward for everyone else. It costs about $1.81 a year to send this newsletter to one person. With an average contribution of $5.89 a month, each supporter effectively keeps WTFJHT free for 39 other readers.

  • So here’s a different kind of Black Friday “sale,” such as it is:

  • Instead of 40% off on stuff you don’t need, it’s a one-time $5.89 tip to cover the cost of this newsletter for 39 other readers. Because that’s how WTFJHT works: a small group of readers choosing to be stakeholders so this independent, reader-funded briefing can stay free and accessible to everyone who needs it.

  • If you’re in a good financial spot this season and this newsletter helps you make the news make sense, consider paying it forward. Chip in $5.89 to keep WTFJHT free for 39 other readers.



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[syndicated profile] gallusrostromegalus_feed

thebisexualmandalorian:

thebisexualmandalorian:

thebisexualmandalorian:

I know I’ve been asking a lot lately, and I appreciate every one of you who’s donated, more than I can possibly tell you. I’m still looking for work, and still making stuff to sell, things are tough right now. Every dollar and every reblog means the world to me.

Aaaand in a particular stroke of bad luck, my car’s check engine light came on. I’m very much hoping it’s an affordable fix, but unfortunately… well. $20 is about the most I can afford to throw at it right now. If you have anything to spare, it would be vastly appreciated.

I am so, so grateful to all of you who donate or signal boost.

Six hundred dollars later, my car is mostly fixed! But 600 is 600, and I need to pay my parents back for at least some of it, so if y'all could signal boost, that would be wonderful. Thank you everyone who’s reblogged and donated, I appreciate you so much.

icon_uk: (Default)
[personal profile] icon_uk posting in [community profile] scans_daily
Well, Illyana has had a couple, Sam and Berto were apparently due to get one in the Krakoan era but it got shelved, and Doug has had his own "upgrade" but now it's someone who has definitely earned one.

Yup, Dani Moonstar is getting a solo miniseries!



Better image and more info under the cut )

[ SECRET POST #6899 ]

Nov. 25th, 2025 05:09 pm
case: (Default)
[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #6899 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.


More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 21 secrets from Secret Submission Post #985.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
kellan_the_tabby: My face, reflected in a round mirror I'm holding up; the rest of the image is the side of my head, hair shorn short. (undercut)
[personal profile] kellan_the_tabby
2025 08 30 14.51.24

[Major Tom is meatloafed in the cat stroller, one forepaw tucked underneath him, the other stretched out in front. His lovely amber eyes are half-open, ears and whiskers alert.]

Yes, this is still all about al-Barran Champions! Look, there’s been stuff.

Possibly Tom wore himself out with all the shouting Friday, because halfway through Saturday he settled down enough that he was willing to spend most of the afternoon in the stroller. It was very pleasant, & also MUCH quieter.

2025 08 30 14.53.52

[A closer view of his handsome face. His eyes are gently closed.]

He napped a lot, even when the local pack of trans kids decided to spend the afternoon in my booth trying to set things on fire. (You know you’re the Cool Grownup when … )

I took him for a couple walks in the stroller, too, just to get him out & about some, & maybe used to all the noise & bother. He did okay, but didn’t want to go too far from the booth.

But mostly, he napped.

2025 08 30 17.25.53

[Tom has flopped over to sleep on his side, head resting against the edge of the stroller.]

& best of all, we had cuddles. Tom’s rarely in the mood to hold paws for long, so this was extra-precious.

I love my great big tomcat.

2025 08 30 17.27.09

[A very close view: one of Major Tom’s forepaws is resting on my finger. His toes are curled just a tiny bit, because he was holding on.]

He’s so very good. He’s the goodest.


originally posted on Patreon; support me over there to see posts a week early!

[syndicated profile] in_the_pipeline_feed

There have been some interesting failures recently in Alzheimer’s trials. As long-time readers will know, I consider basically all Alzheimer’s drug trials to have failed to one degree or another, and particularly when it comes to clearing the “will improve patient’s lives in the real world without putting them at too much risk” hurdle. But these two are notable because they’re aimed outside the usual amyloid zone.

First off, Novo Nordisk reported that semaglutide (the company’s GLP-1 agonist drug, of course) failed in two Alzheimer’s trials. This was going to be a long shot, but long shots are worth taking in this area if you can afford to try them. Studies of thousands of patients with early cognitive impairment who took an oral form of semaglutide (Rybelsus, currently approved as a diabetes therapy) did not show improvements in mental function as compared to placebo. The company ways that the treatment group showed “improvement of Alzheimer’s disease-related biomarkers” in both trials, although it does not (as far as I can see) say what those biomarkers were. And I would wonder how good they are as indicators given that you can show improvements in them and still not beat placebo, personally.

The company’s stock took a hit on the news, which is kind of strange. Surely people weren’t betting on this succeeding? But Novo investors have been a jumpy bunch for a while now as Eli Lilly’s star continues to ascend in this area, so the sight of another possible  life preserver disappearing might have been enough by itself. At any rate, it does appear as if there’s a disease where GLP-1 drugs are not actually beneficial. Novo had some better news today, though, with a once-weekly shot/once-daily pill combination for amycretin, a dual GLP-1/amylin agonist. I see that people are not quite giving up on the GLP-1/Alzheimer’s idea, but it has to be considered an even longer shot than before.

There’s also new in the anti-tau protein area. That’s long been considered a possible Alzheimer’s target, and by “long” I mean decades. But it’s been hard to put that idea to the test in the clinic. Unfortunately, in the last couple of years it has been possible, and the results have not been good so far.  Early last year a Lilly candidate (LY3372689, ceperognastat) failed its own trial. Earlier this year Asceneuron halted work on its own oral anti-tau drug candidate (ASN51), and Biogen stopped BIIB113, another similar effort.

Now all of these are (were) O-GlcNAcase inhibitors, so you could easily make the case that the problem is that might not be a good mechanism to target tau, even if tau itself is a valid idea. But last year Roche bailed on a collaboration for an anti-tau antibody, when went on to fail its trials shortly afterwards. And the latest news is that J&J’s shot at an anti-tau antibody (posdinemab) has also failed its pivotal trial, with no efficacy seen in slowing the disease at the two-year mark. There are other tau programs that are now in the clinic, but they’re clearly going to have to bring something unusual to make you think that they will show interesting levels of efficacy at this point. Good luck, folks. . .

[syndicated profile] aam_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

As we head into the holidays, we must solemnly reflect back on the stories shared here over the years about holidays at work. Here are some of my favorites.

1. The chili cook-off

I worked for a nonprofit, and every year there was a few months long period where every department would do some kind of fundraiser for the nonprofit. My department was famous for a lunchtime chili cook-off that included, of course, voting for a winner. It was my first year there, and my boss kept talking about how popular the chili cook-off was. We were advised we needed to quadruple our normal recipe to have enough for everyone.

One coworker launched in right away with BIG talk about her recipe. And the day of the cook-off, she kept going around and checking out the competition and making allusions to her to secret ingredients. When the judging was over, we learned that she won and she was ecstatic … but then it came out that she’d been buying votes all afternoon! When the accusations were revealed, she refused to give up the trophy.

Oh, and remember the quadruple recipes. Turns out that was bananas, and since everybody ate only a couple spoonfuls of each chili, there was an exorbitant amount left over. Another coworker carried her crockpot of leftovers back to her car and spilled that triple recipe of chili all over it. (2024)

2. The bites

During a potluck, someone (the office never discovered who!) went to the meeting room where the potluck had to be held and took a single bite out of every biteable thing. Scones, bread, fruits, pizza slices. Just one single bite. (2024)

3. The bourbon balls

Many years ago, I worked at the corporate office of a regional retailer. I worked closely with the senior VP, and while he could be a pill at times, I genuinely liked the guy.

One year, I found a recipe for bourbon balls that I decided to make up for the holidays. Knowing that the SVP had a giant sweet tooth and also that he was very fond of bourbon, I brought him a container of several dozen bourbon balls, thinking (foolishly) that he’d enjoy them over the course of several days.

He did not spread them out over several days. He chomped through the entire container in a single afternoon, ingesting a significant amount of bourbon and a whole lot of chocolate in the process.

As it happened, that day turned out to be the day the boss was going through the list of employees to decide how much each of us would get for a year-end bonus. And everyone was quite astounded that year at his unaccustomed generosity in deciding the bonus amounts.

For some reason, every year after that, multiple co-workers would pull me aside in early December to urge me to make up another batch of bourbon balls for the SVP the week before Christmas. (2022)

4. The photos

My dad was a firefighter. They throw wild parties. Not officially Fire Department parties, they just happen to have a raging house party that could rival any fraternity, and invite everyone from work. The story I was told is that at one of these parties, Fireman Bob — who was in a prank war with Fireman Steve — snuck off to Steve’s bedroom and took “boudoir” photos on his bed. He yanked his tighty-whities up between his cheeks and took about a dozen Polaroid photos, leaving them fanned out on Steve’s dresser. Steve said nothing the next shift. Steve never did say anything. He didn’t have to. The next year, Steve gave everyone in the department a photo calendar, featuring Bob’s fancy pictures. (2024)

5. The pizza oven

At my last job, I invited a bunch of coworkers over for pizza from my wood-fired oven. It’s a serious piece of kit – it’s effortless to crank it up to 900 degrees, and it’ll put out a Neapolitan pizza in about a minute and a half. My coworkers brought a ton of beer, and I slung pie for hours while we all debated the merits of various IPAs. While drinking them.

When everyone’s pizza urges were sated, I closed the oven door and let it start to burn itself out, which takes over a day. My wife and I know to never open the door once it’s time to let the oven wind down, but my coworker Bill didn’t know the rules. And Bill was very deep in his cups. So he bellowed, ‘Man, I wonder if it’s still hot in there?’ and grabbed the door.

One of the interesting side-effects of flameless combustion in a low-oxygen environment is the buildup of pyrolytic gases in the oven. This is more than an academic point. PROTIP: when your drunkass opens the oven while your host screams NOOOOOOOOOO and tackles you, the inrushing draft of oxygen will result in explosively energetic resumption of combustion, firing a jet of howling flame across the patio and lighting several pots of decorative plants on fire. And that’s if you’re lucky enough to be Bill, and aren’t just lit on fire like a human road flare. Maybe just don’t. (2017)

6. Crockpot discrimination

Years ago the floor manager banned crockpots from the work floor where teams would use an empty cubicle for team birthdays and celebrations due to ongoing issues. Fast forward a few months; a team brings in a crockpot for an event. An outraged employee approached me yelling that it wasn’t fair the other team could have crockpots and hers couldn’t. She looked me in the eye and completely seriously told me, ‘This is crockpot discrimination!” (2022)

7. The statue

I was invited to my boss’s house for an employee holiday party. This small business was owned by a married couple who were also landlords, so they were pretty wealthy and had a huge house. I was walking around admiring their art when I came across a statue.

A nude statue.

A nude statue of my boss. (2021) 

8. The safety’s committee’s mugs

Our safety initiative committee gave us beautiful logo’d mugs, lovely huge ones – that had a shiny gold enamel on the outside. They were neither dishwasher nor microwave safe. About an hour later, they came and took them all back after someone microwaved one and caused major, massive sparking, panicking half a lunch room.  (2022)

9. The first job

Many, many years ago, at the start of a new job, I was put in charge of the holiday party for over 200 people. I was young and this was my first professional job in my chosen career field. My boss left on maternity leave with little direction. I got the caterer who did my wedding. My assistant was a party planning expert and she handled decorations, etc. based on previous parties.

It was a fiasco. We ran out of food in about 45 minutes. Before she left, the boss got karaoke for the entertainment and nobody wanted to sing in front of basically a group of strangers with some coworkers thrown in. It was open bar, so everyone sat around and drank … and drank. We had one of our maintenance guys dressed as Santa with a sleigh and artificial snow. He drank too. The end result was not pretty. The next day, Santa had to be bailed out of jail for DUI, the rented Santa suit was a total loss, and the local leadership was scrambling to hide the entire fiasco from our corporate HQ. Yeah, the party the next year was quite different. I was still in charge, we still had liquor, but I learned so much. (2022)

10. The surprise

In a previous life/career, I worked in a regional office in Texas supporting salespeople in seven southern/southwestern states. One year, our region had an in-person sales meeting that coincided with the holiday season, so our manager thought it would be a good idea for the salespeople (all from out of town/state) to mix and mingle with our office staff socially at a well-known Texas chain restaurant. Plus-ones were encouraged for our office staff, though of course our sales folks did not have their spouses or SOs with them. Of the five office staff, three of us brought our known significant others, one person came solo, and our office assistant, T., who I loved dearly and who was also a little rough around the edges, brought a person none of us had ever met and who looked like he had literally time traveled in from Lonesome Dove or was the long-lost brother of Sam Elliott, complete with cowboy hat and duster coat. He spoke zero words to anyone. An hour or two into the event, I found myself sitting with my spouse and a couple of our sales folks, all of us a few beverages in, and someone finally asked, ‘So, T, who’s this?’ because it was getting awkward that this one individual was such a mystery to us all, and there were only about 20 people there total!

T calmly replied, “Oh him? He’s my f–kbuddy.”

My spouse and I still quote this memorable gem of an introduction. (2023)

11. The poop

Someone pooped in an attorney’s trash can one year during the office party. (2017)

12. The artificial trees

Our admin was retiring. The admin had a habit of claiming things or just straight up taking them, and treating coworkers like trash. As a result, the admin was not very popular.

Before they left, they announced that two dusty old artificial trees in the lobby belonged to them, and they would be taking them. Cue the consternation of the entire office, who apparently couldn’t function without the trees. After ignoring all the bickering and wailing, the admin loaded up the trees and drove them a quarter mile to a thrift store and donated them.

End of story right?

Except the very same trees made a surprise appearance at the holiday white elephant a month later. Cue cheers and cut throat fights to win them. The eventual winner bequeathed the trees to the office in perpetuity.

Turns out a coworker called the thrift store, claimed a confused relative donated the trees, and begged for their return. They then hid the trees until their triumphant reveal at the party.

The office continues to reference the reinstated dusty old artificial trees and the story of their rescue with great fondness. (2025)

13. The hometown hero

This is actually a heartwarming story that despite being more than 15 years ago still makes me really happy.

So mid-2000s. I worked at a pediatric hospital. Anyone who is in-patient on Christmas day is SICK. There are no scheduled surgeries, everyone who can be safely discharged for a day generally is. It is rough for families who observe.

This is when American Idol was THE thing. And a contestant from our city had done well the prior season — hadn’t won, but kind of ‘hometown hero.’ I didn’t watch the show so wasn’t super familiar, but I’d heard about him. We heard he was visiting with his family. Figured that they’d stop in a couple rooms, get some photos/PR, and go on home.

Readers, I kid you not, this man, his brother, and their parents visited every single child in the hospital. They were there for hours and hours. They put on gowns, masks, and gloves and took them off again. They held babies. They sang carols with families and staff. The singer guy was, uhh, surprisingly handsome in person. He made the adults and teenagers blush with his charm – including me.

I’ve never seen anything like it, before or since. It must have been so exhausting for him and his family — both physically hard, rough on their voices (so much singing!), and emotionally fraught — so much heartache and sadness. But the joy they brought to everyone, including this pessimistic Jewish woman who always works on Christmas cause it isn’t my holiday … well, it was certainly my most memorable Christmas. (2022)

The post the chili cook-off vote buying, the boudoir photos, and other tales of holidays at work appeared first on Ask a Manager.

Oddments

Nov. 25th, 2025 05:56 pm
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin

We perceive that there does not appear to be any gender-confusion, or relationships with military helmets, connected with this particular tortoise, or maybe no-one noticed: Gramma the Galápagos tortoise, oldest resident of San Diego Zoo, dies at about 141. Not quite old enough to have met that there Charles Darwin, then.

***

Reversal of Fates: Access Through Photographs can be a Counterbalance

Ongoing digitization and cataloging work not only serves the interests of scholars and manuscript communities—it also creates crucial, publicly-accessible provenance records that provide an increasingly robust bulwark against manuscript theft and trafficking.

Sing it.

***

Thousands of rare American recordings — some 100 years old — go online for all to enjoy:

“A lot of that music from that era, the record companies did not keep backups. They were all destroyed, almost all. And it’s all up to the record collectors. They’re the ones who kind of saved the music from that era,”
....
Superior to a random recording uploaded to YouTube with no accompanying information, the database includes things like where the song was recorded and when, as well as lists of musicians and composers who worked on the songs.

***

I think I may have mentioned at some time the phenomenon of the 'monkey walk': Before Tinder, there was the Monkey Parade… . Though some recent works read for review incline me to think that one reason for the decline not mentioned in that piece was the rise of the coffee-bar - indoors in the warm with a juke-box, and the site of massive 50s moral panic around The Young.

***

Statue to 'remarkable' woman who escaped slavery:

A statue to a "remarkable and brave" woman who fled slavery and torture in the US has been unveiled in the fishing town in northern England where she found freedom.
Mary Ann Macham spent weeks hiding in woods in Virginia before stowing away on a ship, eventually arriving in North Shields in the early 1830s.
She was taken in by a Quaker family, married a local man and remained in the town until she died aged 91.

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Posted by Ask a Manager

A reader writes:

My husband and I are splitting up after eight years together. We’ve had issues that we’ve been working on for a long time, but the final split happened fairly suddenly and I’m reeling right now.

On top of everything else I’m dealing with now (including finding a new place to live, getting off his health insurance, etc.), I’m wondering how to talk about this at work. My coworkers have met my husband at many events over the years, and I’ve talked about him a lot at work. I don’t know how to tell people we’re splitting up without inviting a ton of questions, none of which I’m really ready to talk about right now, and I also don’t want to trauma-dump on people I work with!

We do usually make time at the beginning of our team meetings for people to share any personal updates so I thought maybe I could mention it then, but people usually share happier things like an upcoming vacation or (sob) a wedding. Do I just … announce it then and say I don’t really want to talk about it? That feels incredibly awkward. But telling people one-on-one feels awkward too, and that would be a dozen individual awkward conversations instead of just one big one.

I’m also undecided on whether I’m going to change my name back to my maiden name, but if I do that, I’ll obviously need a way to explain it.

I also will need some time off to deal with logistical stuff, like lawyers and my impending move. My boss is pretty flexible with time off, but I’m worried this is going to take over my life for a while. Can I just … say that? Like explain that I’m about to have a couple of months of a higher-than-normal level of outside commitments, but that it won’t go on forever?

An additional complicating factor is that our professional worlds have some overlap: we’re in adjacent industries, and we know a lot of the same people professionally. I feel like I’m going to be fielding “how’s Jim?” inquiries for years and having to re-explain the divorce every time.

You can read my answer to this letter at New York Magazine today. Head over there to read it.

The post how do I tell my coworkers I’m getting a divorce? appeared first on Ask a Manager.

Interview and Update

Nov. 25th, 2025 10:55 am
marthawells: Murderbot with helmet (Default)
[personal profile] marthawells
Great interview about Murderbot:

Bifurcating Character with Incisive and Witty Inner Monologue: a Masterclass with ‘Murderbot’ Co-Showrunners Paul Weitz and Spirit Awards Winner Chris Weitz


Since SecUnits issued by the Corporation Rim ­(a group of mega-corporations ruling the galaxy in the distant future) are sentient, complete obedience to human orders is guaranteed by the “governor module” in each unit. However, Murderbot (Alexander Skarsgård, who nabbed an Emmy for his intricate and chilling performance in the HBO series, Big Little Lies), figures out how to disable its module to gain autonomy. “Murderbot is sentient from the get-go — it’s basically a slavery narrative. It’s important to Martha that Murderbot was always sentient,” Chris says of the close collaboration with consulting producer, Wells. “All the SecUnits are under human control. They can think for themselves but can’t act for themselves. So, they experience this torture of being at the disposal of others.” In addition to exploring themes of humanity and free will, the series also calls into question the issue of personhood, as Paul notes: “To what degree are we going to grant personhood to non-human intelligence?”

https://www.filmindependent.org/blog/bifurcating-character-with-incisive-and-witty-inner-monologue-a-masterclass-with-murderbot-co-showrunners-paul-weitz-and-spirit-awards-winner-chris-weitz/


***


I'm trying to get back into the swing of things after basically three weeks of travel in October, catching up on household stuff, trying to get ready for the holidays, getting back into working on the current book. I think I was more mentally exhausted than physically, but it was still a lot.

I didn't stay more than a day in any one city (except for two nights in Allentown, PA, which was lovely) and I was mostly leaving before most of the hotels started to serve breakfast, so I was living on a lot of airplane food. I did get to ride the train for the first time in the US (the Acela Amtrack) which was fun. I've ridden trains in Sweden, the Netherlands, and Scotland, but never here.

There was a lot of emotional overwhelm, seeing so many people, but also it felt really good, because they were all people who cared about books and art and creativity. The smallest crowd was in New York, about 40-50 people, the largest was in Seattle with around 300. The Texas Book Festival in Austin was like an encapsulation of the whole trip, being in a giant crowd of people (the largest in the festival's 30 year history) who were all "books, books, books!" I've heard that people seemed to be going to more arts-related events lately, and that was what I saw on my trip.
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Posted by Ask a Manager

A reader writes:

I’m student work head at a university library — basically, I’m a student managing the regular student workers as a way of getting experience in management, leadership, etc. One of the workers has a bad habit of asking questions about everything. Usually it isn’t too bad, and of course curiosity should usually be encouraged, though it can derail conversations.

But recently, there was an incident where some of our just-put-up Christmas decorations were stolen. Naturally, I was upset, and I happened to mutter, “Whoever did this is a real berk.” (I don’t know why I chose that word — it was just the first that leapt to mind.) Overhearing this, she asked, “What does that mean? What did you say? Is it like the f-word?” (The last was in response to my attempt to answer by saying simply that it was a rude British word.)

She would not stop asking about it, and given that I was already in a bad mood from the stolen decorations, I started getting upset. I managed to get away before blowing my lid, but I am utterly perplexed that, seeing that I was upset, she decided it was time to begin an interrogation.

How should I (a) apologize for any offense I gave in my hasty departure, and (b) explain to her that there are times (such as when somebody’s upset) when it’s not appropriate to badger them with questions?

Was your quick departure actually rude? Because unless you were outright rude to her, this doesn’t sound like something you need to go back and apologize for. If I’m wrong and it was ruder than it sounds, then just be straightforward: “I’m sorry that I was short with you the other day after the decorations were stolen. I was caught up in addressing what had happened, and I wasn’t in a place to answer language questions, but I should have been clearer about that.”

For your second question, I wouldn’t go back now and chastise her about what she did; it doesn’t sound that egregious, more like she just misread what was happening on your end of the conversation. But since it’s part of a larger pattern of her derailing conversations, you can resolve to address that the next time there’s a natural opportunity for it.  For example, the next time she’s intensely questioning something in a way that’s disruptive, you can say, “I need to focus on figuring out X right now, so can you hold those questions for now?” or “Right now we need to get through topics X and Y, so I don’t want us to get sidetracked on Z” or so forth.

In other words, think about what you can do on your end to manage these conversations more assertively. In fact, I think the “berk” situation would have been a lot less frustrating for you if you’d done that! You probably would have come away less irritated if early on in that conversation you’d said something like, “Sorry, I’m right in the middle of dealing with this theft and I need to focus on that — give me some time to take care of this.” I think the fact that you’re not managing these conversations in the moment is making it more aggravating.

If addressing it case-by-case in the moment doesn’t solve it, then you can have a larger-picture conversation with her explaining that while you’re happy to answer questions in general, you won’t always be able to pivot to answering them right in the moment if something more pressing needs to be taken care of first. But that’s very much about the bigger pattern and not about the “berk” interrogation.

The post how do I deal with badly timed questions as a manager? appeared first on Ask a Manager.

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