I Can Has Cheezburger? ([syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed) wrote2025-11-16 02:00 pm

30 Pawdorably Cute Kitties Bundled Up in Blankets This Winter

Posted by Briana Viser

Some people love summer – the bright, sunny skies, the feeling of vacations, beaches, and adventures in the air. And then there are winter people…people who love that the sun goes down at 5 pm, who are absolutely agog to get into bed and snuggle up their furry feline friend under covers. At ICatHasCheezburger, we fit into the latter category. Because let's face it, summer is for dog people who want to take their pupper on a road trip for camping and hiking in forests and mountains. Cat people love winter because of their drab, introverted, and cozy demeanors. 

Pawdorable kitties love to be cozy too. They're unrestrained chaos all day running around the house exhausts them so that they crash out early – just like you and the sun. Good thing it's almost December, we all have that jittery, wintery blues cropping up to make us want to binge watch Harry Potter under covers while drinking hot cocoa. Enjoy! 

kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
kaberett ([personal profile] kaberett) wrote2025-11-16 10:36 pm
Entry tags:

vital functions

... has done so many things and is Going To Bed and will fill in this placeholder Tomorrow.

sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey: passion)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2025-11-16 04:45 pm

You know what comes right after the dark

My poem "The Avalon Procedure" has been accepted by Not One of Us. It is finally Arthuriana; it owes its title as well as a debt of argument to Bryher and the rest is diaspora and geology. I still have apples on my table from earlier, brighter this autumn, and their scent of sweet orchards and earth. If you want in on the saddle-stapled pages of this enduringly black-and-white 'zine, I can only recommend it.
I Can Has Cheezburger? ([syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed) wrote2025-11-16 01:00 pm

26 Heartwarming Photos of Sweet Sweater Sporting Cat Children to Keep Out the Cold

Posted by Laurent Shinar

With winter creeping its way into our bones, it has come that time of year to bundle up in whatever clothing you can find to keep the cold out and whatever warmth you can get your mitts on, in. however, this does not particularly apply to our feline friends whose fur keeps their body temp well regulated throughout the colder months. That is, unless they have a hooman pawrent who likes to dress them up in seasonal attire.

The kind of attire that might be useless at keeping cats warm, as they can already do so themselves. But very useful for keeping our emotional hearts warm and well tended to. Because if there is one thing that we hoomans can all agree upon, it is that cats get infinitely cuter when they wear sweaters. So grab your favorite blanket, snood or hoodie to curl up in and cozy up to these cute cattos.
 

We're back in business - SUBSCRIBE here for cute kitties to take over your inbox weekly!

luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
luzula ([personal profile] luzula) wrote2025-11-16 09:57 pm
Entry tags:

Recent reading

I read some books!

What Fresh Hell Is This? by Heather Corinna (2021)
About perimenopause and menopause. Well, I guess I learned things? It did all feel like a huge and intimidating list of possible symptoms to get, and I don't know yet how it'll shake out for me. But I guess one advantage of knowing what's possible is that it will help me connect the dots when/if various things do happen.

A Nobleman's Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel by K J Charles (2023)
Hmm, hm. Meh. I thought I'd try something that's supposed to be self-indulgent, and this was certainly page-turney enough, but did not really zing for me. I can't tell if it's just that my reading is still far from my previous baseline, or whether this would not have been my favorite Charles in any case. Somehow I could not keep from comparing this to others of her books and seeing commonalities in the types of characters and relationships she often writes, and thus not being entirely able to see the characters as people of their own.

Not a book, but I thought the blog series Life, Work, Death, and the Peasant by the historian Bret Deveraux was interesting. It models the life and labor of pre-modern peasants, using sources from ancient Rome and medieval Europe. And I do mean modeling, trying to estimate such things as the number of pregnancies a woman would have on average, and the number of hours worked on various tasks. It really hammers home that while yes, I do live on a farm now, and I do over time want to try to produce more of the food we eat, there is so much labor pre-modern peasants did that I don't have to do. The amount of time women spent on textile production (mostly spinning) is unbelievable. And I didn't know the medieval spinning wheel is about three times more productive than the spindle of antiquity! Carrying water (back-breaking work!), washing by hand, etc. Obviously I knew people did these things by hand, but it's so interesting seeing estimates of the time it took.

I do think modern civilization is hugely wasteful of energy and materials, but can we not find some appropriate level of energy use and technology? Pumping water for household use, and spinning thread with machines: yes, great use of energy and technology. \o/ Mining bitcoins: nope, terrible use of energy and technology. /o\
merricatb: Image of Kala Dandekar (Kala2)
merricatb ([personal profile] merricatb) wrote in [community profile] smallfandomfest2025-11-16 01:49 pm

Pimp: Sense8 by MerricatB

Would you believe a show that had enough of a fanbase to successfully bully Netflix into submission after a premature cancellation would be considered small in the year of our lord 2025? It's true!

Sense8 (2015-2018), the sci-fi (ish) masterpiece of human experience by the Wachowski sisters (The Matrix) and J. Michael Straczynski (Babylon 5) was cancelled after two seasons because Netflix hates joy and queer people. But fans rallied and got them to bend the knee, bringing us closure for our beloved cluster. And still the fandom is sooo small y'all.

So what's in it for you?

Read more... )

tavina: (Default)
tavina ([personal profile] tavina) wrote in [community profile] au5k2025-11-16 04:48 pm
Entry tags:

Nominations Open for 2025/2026 Round!

Nominations Open!

Relationships Tagset | Freeforms Tagset | Nominations Guidelines | Recursive Fandom Evidence Post | AU Promo Post

Nominations are open a little early! Please see the links above for nominations guidelines and where to nominate.

In addition, please feel free to nominate or check out the recursive fandoms proposed for the tagset here.

Also please feel free to promote your AU ideas here.

heartsfate: Marvel || X-Men Anime (Scott Summers || Side Profile)
Gaelle ([personal profile] heartsfate) wrote in [community profile] animatedfanfiction2025-11-16 04:32 pm
Entry tags:

Fic: Grieving for Two || X-Men '97

Title: Grieving for Two
Fandoms: X-Men '97
Pairings: Scott/Rogue, Gambit/Rogue, Gambit/Scott. Implied Scott/Rogue/Gambit
Rating: General
Word Count: 600
Warnings/Spoilers: AU!Post episode 5 of X-Men '97. Canon Character death.
Summary: Rogue uses an interesting way to try and deal with her grief.
Notes: Written for [community profile] xmen100 prompt Danger Room

(Here)
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-11-16 03:13 pm

Food

Extreme floods are slashing global rice yields faster than expected

Flooding is emerging as a silent but powerful destroyer of global rice supplies—and the danger is accelerating.

Scientists discovered that a week of full submergence is enough to kill most rice plants, making flooding a far greater threat than previously understood. Intensifying extreme rainfall events may amplify these losses unless vulnerable regions adopt more resilient rice varieties
.

Read more... )
veronyxk84: (Vero#spike)
VeroNyxK84 ([personal profile] veronyxk84) wrote in [community profile] 100words2025-11-16 09:59 pm

[Prompt #468] BtVS / Spike — Carrying On

Title: Carrying On
Fandom: Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Characters/Pairing: Spike (implied Spuffy)
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: grieving
Word count: 100 (Google Docs)
Setting/Spoilers: Set some time between S5 and S6.
Summary: The world is not the same for Spike now that Buffy is gone.
Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction created for fun and no profit has been made. All rights belong to the respective owners.

Prompt: #468 - Endless

Crossposted: [community profile] anythingdrabble, [community profile] drabble_zone, My journal


READ: Carrying On )
goddess47: Emu! (Default)
goddess47 ([personal profile] goddess47) wrote in [community profile] sweetandshort2025-11-16 03:52 pm

(10 out of 20) The Write Stuff - Stargate Atlantis (PG)

Title: The Write Stuff
Author: [personal profile] goddess47
Character(s): John Sheppard, Rodney McKay
Pairing(s): John Sheppard/Rodney McKay
Rating: PG
Length: 365 words
Warnings: none

Notes:

For [community profile] mcsheplets prompt #117 games

For Writer's Choice prompt #142 - post-it

For [community profile] sweetandshort November 2025 prompt - award



Summary:

Any excuse for a party!



The Write Stuff on AO3

pushkin666: (GEN - lack of cake)
pushkin666 ([personal profile] pushkin666) wrote2025-11-16 08:41 pm
Entry tags:
I Can Has Cheezburger? ([syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed) wrote2025-11-16 11:00 am

Why aren't cats afraid of heights? The online feline family is figuring out this age old question po

Posted by Ayala Sorotsky

Cats: tiny chaos engines powered by confidence, caffeine (ours, not theirs), and laws of physics that apparently apply only to lesser beings. Someone recently asked the internet a very good question - why aren't cats afraid of heights? And honestly, we've all wondered that while watching our own feline overlords balance themselves on a curtain rod like they're auditioning for "Mission Impawssible".

The real answer (yes, science has one!) lies in evolution. Cats are built for the high life - literally. Their flexible spines, lightning-fast reflexes, and righting reflex (that midair twist they do to land on their feet) make them nature's acrobats. It's not arrogance, it's centuries of instinct that say "I can totally jump that distance", even when… they absolutely cannot.

But it's not just about physics - it's about attitude. Cats don't fear heights because cats don't fear anything. Vacuum? Maybe. Vet? Definitely. Gravity? Never heard of her. And that's part of why we love them. They balance between genius and goofball so effortlessly. They remind us to be bold, to take the leap (preferably with less meowing), and to trust our paws along the way.

So yes, cats may laugh in the face of gravity - but somehow, gravity always seems to let them get away with it.

mrissa: (Default)
mrissa ([personal profile] mrissa) wrote2025-11-16 02:39 pm
Entry tags:

Books read, early November

 

William Alexander, Sunward. A charming planetary SF piece with very carefully done robots. Loved this, put it on my list to get several people for Christmas.

Ann Wolbert Burgess and Steven Matthew Constantine, Expert Witness: The Weight of Our Testimony When Justice Hangs in the Balance. I picked this up from a library display table, and I was disappointed in it. It isn't actually very much theory of the use of expert witnesses in the American legal system. Mostly it's about Burgess's personal experiences of being an expert witness in famous trials. She sure was involved in a lot of the famous trials of my lifetime! Each of which you can get a very distant recap of! So if that's your thing, go to; I know a lot of people like "true crime" and this seems adjacent.

Steve Burrows, A Siege of Bitterns. I wanted to fall in love with this series of murders featuring a birder detective. Alas, it was way more sexist than its fairly recent publication date could support--nothing jaw-dropping, lots of small things, enough that I won't be continuing to read the series.

Andrea Long Chu, Authority: Essays. Mostly interesting, and wow does she have an authoritative voice without having an authoritarian one, which is sometimes my complaint about books that are mostly literary criticism.

David Downing, Zoo Station. A spy novel set in Berlin (and other places) just before the outbreak of WWII. I liked but didn't love it--it was reasonably rather than brilliantly written/characterized, though the setting details were great--so I will probably read a few more from the library rather than buying more.

Kate Elliott, The Nameless Land. Discussed elsewhere.

Michael Dylan Foster, The Book of Yokai. Analysis of Japanese supernatural creatures in historical context, plus a large illustrated compendium of examples. A reference work rather than one to sit and read at length.

Michael Livingston, Bloody Crowns: A New History of the Hundred Years War. Extensive and quite good; when the maps for a book go back to the 400s and he takes a moment to say that we're not thinking enough of the effects of the Welsh, I will settle in and feel like I'm in good hands. Livingston's general idea is that the conflict in question meaningfully lasted longer than a hundred years, and he makes a quite strong argument on the earlier side and...not quite as strong on the later side, let's say. But still glad to have it around, yay.

Michael T. Osterholm and Mark Olshaker, The Big One: How We Must Prepare for Future Deadly Pandemics. Also a disappointment. If you've been listening to science news in this decade, you'll know most of this stuff. Osterholm and Olshaker are also miss a couple of key points that shocked me and blur their own political priorities with scientific fact in a fairly careless way. I'd give this one a miss.

Valencia Robin, Lost Cities. Poems, gorgeous and poignant and wow am I glad that I found these, thanks to whichever bookseller at Next Chapter wrote that shelf-talker.

Dana Simpson, Galactic Unicorn. These collections of Phoebe & Her Unicorn strips are very much themselves. This is one to the better end of how they are themselves, or maybe I was very much in the mood for it when I read it. Satisfyingly what it is.

Amanda Vaill, Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution. If you were hoping for a lot of detail on And Peggy!, your hope is in vain here, the sisters of the title are very clearly Angelica and Eliza only. Vaill does a really good job with their lives and contexts, though, and is one of the historians who manages to convey the importance of Gouverneur Morris clearly without having to make a whole production of it. (I mean, if Hamilton gets a whole production, why not Gouverneur Morris, but no one asked me.)

Amy Wilson, Snowglobe. MG fantasy with complicated friend relationships for grade school plus evil snowglobes. Sure yes absolutely, will keep reading Wilson as I can get her stuff.

Jane Ziegelman and Andrew Coe, A Square Meal: A Culinary History of the Great Depression. This went interestingly into the details of what people were eating and what other people thought they should be eating, in ways that ground a lot of culinary history for the rest of the century to follow. Ziegelman and Coe either are a bit too ready to believe that giving people enough to eat makes them less motivated to work or were not very careful with their phrasing, so take those bits with a grain of salt, but in general if you want to know what people were eating (and with how many grains of salt!) in the US at the time, this is interesting and worth the time.

embraceyourinnerdork: screenshot taken from Mulan 2, Princess Ting-Ting with chopsticks up her nose (Default)
jay jay the jet plane ([personal profile] embraceyourinnerdork) wrote in [community profile] holiday_wishes2025-11-16 03:09 pm

(no subject)

Hey y'all, I'm Jay, and I'm reusing a lot of my previous lists. Don't mind the government name on my address. I think I'm gonna have fun going through and seeing what I can gift others, but in meantime, here's a few things I'm looking for, in no particular order:

1. Comments on my work

2. Any transformative works based on my work

3. Honeycomb toffee! It's my favorite candy that I can't easily get where I'm living. Great Lakes folks may also know it as sponge candy (Stefanelli's/Romolo/Pulakos my beloved), but Wikipedia tells me honeycomb toffee is the proper name. And of course you may just know it as Crunchie or Violet Crumble!

4. Obligatory Amazon wishlist

5. Instacart gift cards, so I can get groceries. My account email is gasolinecancan@hotmail.com

6. Commission me?

7. Recs for artists I can commission! Be that you, a friend, or an artist you think is cool. Bonus points for an artist who can draw crazy anime hairstyles ;)

8. Butterflies! Inasmuch as I can keep a collection, I collect butterflies, so anything with them is welcome

9. If the spirit so moves you (if you're into hot-blooded power of friendship anime), watch G Gundam. (The link is a promo post introducing the plot to newbies.) It's an old love that's recently been reignited for me and I would love someone to talk to about it especially now that fandom has gotten more queer-friendly than it was twenty years ago. It's been recently remastered, I believe Crunchyroll has the sub, and the dub (which is actually pretty good) is easy enough to find, including iirc on the Internet Archive - and if you find it easier to watch with someone, hit me up and I can take you through!

My address is:
E Cerezo
109 E Lincoln Ave Apt A
McDonald PA 15057
case: (Default)
Case ([personal profile] case) wrote in [community profile] fandomsecrets2025-11-16 03:26 pm

[ SECRET POST #6890 ]


⌈ Secret Post #6890 ⌋

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


01.
[Genshin Impact]


More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 30 secrets from Secret Submission Post #984.
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.
badly_knitted: (Ficlet Zone Mod)
badly_knitted ([personal profile] badly_knitted) wrote in [community profile] ficlet_zone2025-11-16 08:17 pm

Challenge 92: Reverse Fandom: Dead Like Me


This month's challenge is:






Click on the challenge, pick any episode title, or more than one, as inspiration, and start writing!


Reminder of Rules

Entries can be any length you like. You can post as many entries to each challenge as you're inspired to write.
If posting direct to the community, please place the body of your entry behind a cut.
Tag with the appropriate Category, Challenge, Fandom, Type, and Ratings tags. If a tag for your fandom doesn't exist, leave a request on the Tag Request post and I'll create the tags you need. You can request as many fandom tags as you want.
You don't need to use the challenge word or phrase in your fic, though you can if you like. Please include the song or episode title you use in your header.
Suggestions for future challenges are welcome on the Questions & Suggestions post.
There is no deadline for entries.

Have fun!





rhi: A white teapot with bluework pouring hot tea into a matching teacup. (teapot)
rhi ([personal profile] rhi) wrote2025-11-16 02:06 pm

Recipe: Spiced Nut Bread

So, it's too warm here for how dark it gets so early, and the leaves are still on the trees so it clearly cannot be deer season yet much less time to worry about holiday presents.  But, weirdly, my brain is in fall baking mode.  :sighs: Brains, man.

Have an old recipe I adapted years ago, originally from The Spice Cookbook by Avanelle Day and Lillie Stuckey, which I highly recommend and can be found in ebook if nothing else.  Also, oh my gods but the buttermilk powder from Bob's Red Mill is the most cost effective thing ever.  One bag cost me about... 2 pints of liquid buttermilk?  It has made a great deal more than that so far and is nowhere near empty.

Spiced Nut Bread

 

Hope y'all enjoy!