Cartoon: Naughty to nice list
Dec. 7th, 2025 01:30 pmA cartoon by Mike Luckovich.
Related | Nothing says 'tough on drugs' like Trump pardoning a trafficker
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Dec. 7th, 2025 12:00 pmA client calls us on the phone asking about her M1PR. She says she’s worried because the money hasn’t come yet. Here’s the thing: It’s currently mid June and the money never comes before August. Client: “I’m calling to check on my Property tax rebate. It hasn’t come yet, and I’m getting quite worried.” Me: […]
Get Rec’d with Amanda – Volume 104
Dec. 7th, 2025 10:00 amWelcome back!
A nice variety in today’s post! There’s a YA holiday anthology, crafty non-fiction, a monster romance, and some saintly history.
What recommendations would you like to share? Let us know in the comments!
For the Rest of Us
A YA anthology edited by Dahlia Adler, who runs our monthly queer romance posts. If you’re always searching for other representations of cultural holidays, this is a great collection of authors.
Fourteen acclaimed authors showcase the beautiful and diverse ways holidays are observed in this festive anthology. Keep the celebrations going all year long with this captivating and joyful read!
From Lunar New Year to Solstice, Día de Los Muertos to Juneteenth, and all the incredible days in between, it’s clear that Americans don’t just have one holiday. Edited by the esteemed Dahlia Adler and authored by creators who have lived these festive experiences firsthand, this joyful collection of stories shows that there isn’t one way to experience a holiday.
With stories
Dahlia Adler, Sydney Taylor Honor winner of Going Bicoastal
Candace Buford, author of Good as Gold
A. R. Capetta and Cory McCarthy, authors of the Once & Future series
Preeti Chhibber, author of Payal Mehta’s Romance Revenge Plot
Natasha Díaz, award-winning author of Color Me In
Kelly Loy Gilbert, Stonewall Book Award winning author of Picture Us in the Light
Kosoko Jackson, USA Today bestselling author of The Forest Demands Its Due
Aditi Khorana, award-winning author of Mirror in the Sky
Katherine Locke, award-winning author of This Rebel Heart
Abdi Nazemian, Stonewall Book Award–winning author of Only This Beautiful Moment
Laura Pohl, New York Times bestselling author of The Grimrose Girls
Sonora Reyes, Pura Belpré Honor winner of The Lesbiana’s Guide to Catholic School
Karuna Riazi, contributor to The Grimoire of Grim Fates
How to Be a Saint
I’m a Last Podcast on the Left listener and one of my favorite series they did was on the lives and deaths of saints. If you like wild, religious history, this is a worth a look.
Part history lesson. Part sacrilege. An entirely good time.
Think you have what it takes to be a saint? Lucky for you, thousands of souls have paved the way to heaven—creating a clear formula for getting the job done while also leaving a rich, disturbing history behind them. And in just five easy-ish steps, you can learn how to secure your own halo!
But even if the whole “dying and becoming a saint” thing doesn’t appeal to you, the bizarrely bureaucratic process of canonization is still guaranteed to delight and entertain. How to Be Saint is a compulsively readable and endlessly entertaining ride through Catholicism for anyone who enjoys their history with a side of comedy. From flying friars to severed heads, this book explores the wild lives (and deaths) of saints and pulls the curtain back on the oddest quirks of religious doctrine.
Whether you’re a lifelong Catholic or a weird-history enthusiast, How to Be a Saint is your ultimate guide to understanding the hilarious, fascinating, and shockingly true history of sainthood.
Little Woodchucks
Looking to pick up a hobby and increase family bonding time? Nick Offerman and Lee Buchanan have put together a primer on woodworking with some family friendly projects.
From New York Times bestselling author, Emmy-winning actor, and charismatically carnivorous woodworker Nick Offerman and his fellow champion creator Lee Buchanan (who is also not averse to delicious meats), an illustrated woodworking guide with projects for the whole family
Are you a parent or an otherwise amply sized Woodchuck interested in making projects with, or for, your kids? Or are you an aspiring small Woodchuck ready to get into some quality mischief that involves a hammer, nails, and your very own pocketknife? Well, do we have a guide for you!
Offerman Woodshop is opening its avuncular doors to woodworkers of all ages in the form of twelve brand-new, family-friendly undertakings perfect for kids, from beginner offerings like a handmade box kite to more challenging structures like a garden planter.
All projects are achievable and fun and encourage eye contact, giggles, handshakes, and other old-fashioned familial engagements, while introducing young woodworkers-to-be to the satisfaction and good clean fun of hands-on crafting.
No Planning for Love
For all my cozy monster romance lovers. I will say that the gargoyle on the cover gives me Mass Effect Asari vibes.
Welcome to Monstera Bluff, a quaint, coastal small town with a monstrously big secret.
After Cara Bishop’s terrible year of heartache and upheaval, she finally lands her dream job as a city planner… in a place that just so happens to be inhabited by monsters and witches she never knew existed. Go figure they’d grapple with the same urban planning issues as everyone else! As the shock of their existence wears off, she’s determined to land on her feet once and for all in this unusual yet charming place that feels so far away from everything she’s trying to escape. Except, a brooding gargoyle named Ben—who is frustratingly unavoidable both at work and outside of it—as well as some odious local power brokers seem quite unhappy with her sudden appearance in their hidden, magickal town.
Ben Garde-Pierre thought his humdrum road construction project for the town would proceed like any other. That is, until Cara—a human uninitiated with his world— arrives with a shiny new job at town hall, shaking up his entire life. Her presence proves to be an unexpected though not unwelcome complication. Ben soon recognizes he must protect her from a series of escalating forces that would drive her away, including his own burgeoning attraction to her.
Despite these obstacles, will Cara reclaim her career and make a life for herself in Monstera Bluff? Or will this be yet another mistake in her rollercoaster of a year?
Is Ruby Still a 'Serious' Programming Language?
Dec. 7th, 2025 08:34 amRead more of this story at Slashdot.
The Cultivated Cream of the Comedic Cat Crop Made of 27 Meowing Memes
Dec. 7th, 2025 11:00 amCats don't just do comedy - they embody it. They're the floofy philosophers of foolishness, the tiny toe-bean jesters roaming our homes with an air of sophistication… right before falling off a countertop they absolutely meant to fall off. Truly, they are the cultivated cream of the comedic crop: elegant in theory, hilariously unhinged in practice.
Ask any cat parent and they'll confirm that their feline friend is a walking, meowing contradiction. One moment they're perched like a regal meowsterpiece - perfect posture, half-closed eyes, whiskers poised for a Renaissance portrait. The next moment, they're tearing around the living room at mach speed because their own tail "looked suspicious". High art meets chaotic slapstick, and we are merely the witnesses.
There's the dignified loaf who chooses to sit in a box two sizes too small, insisting it's avant-garde interior design. The "intellectual" kitty who studies the mysteries of the universe by blankly staring at a wall for twenty minutes straight. The self-proclaimed comedian cat who bonks their head on the doorframe and looks offended at the door.
This is the essence of cat comedy: intentional or accidental, refined or ridiculous, cats are always serving their funniest selves. And we - devoted feline fanatics - clap at it like the good audience members we are. After all, when the world gets too serious, a little meowing madness is exactly the cultured humor we need.
26 Merry Catmas Memes to Sleigh Your Spirits With Seasonal Silliness
Dec. 7th, 2025 09:00 amOnly three weeks until Catmas, feline fam! We hope your bells are jingling and ring-ting-tingaling, too because it's lovely weather for a sleigh ride together with you. That's all our original words, no, don't look it up or Google it. Remember, not everything you read on the internet is true.
But in all seriousness, we're pawsitively pumped for Santa Paws to come. We know that it's a stressful time - the end of the year, mandatory family time, traveling, buying presents, and kids being on break from school, but we're here to bring those vibes back up and get you in the hissterical holiday spirit. How else can we do that except with some festive "Merry Catmas" memes?
If there's one thing we love more than Christmas, it's cats. And if you're reading this, you probably feel the same way. Shake off that stress and fill yourself up with pawsitivity from all these cute cats celebrating Catmas in the only way they know how - with pure sass and silliness. They may pretend like they don't like Christmas, but we all know they do. Even if it's just to accomplish their purrsonal mission of taking down the Christmas tree every year. Everyone needs a goal, right?
The holiday spirit is in the room with us, and it's full of cattos. Enjoy these feline funnies and have a meowy Catmas!
It's finally cold outside. Cold and festive. This is one of our favorite periods of the year for the obvious reasons and for the less obvious ones. Like the fact that this is the best time of year to cuddle under blankets with our cats. We're cold, they're cold, and the two best sources of heat in the house are the blankets and the humans, so we become their favorite napping spots. Of course, as fun as it may be to be inside when it's cold, this is also an important time to keep an eye and an ear out, because outside, there are no blankets for lost kittens to hide under.
And the kitten in this story… considering the cold and the injuries that she had, would not have survived the winter out there alone. Heck, we're not sure she would have survived for a couple more days. But she lucked out. The kitten was found by a dog, and this dog, confused and excited, alerted his pawrents, and they gave her the second chance that she deserved.
C&L's Late Nite Music Club With Freddy Jones Band: 'In A Daydream'
Dec. 7th, 2025 04:00 am
The Freddy Jones band was formed by two friends, Wayne Healy and Marty Lloyd back in 1990.
Former Loyola University classmates Healy and Lloyd created the band in the early Nineties and quickly became a fixture on the college circuit. Encouraged by the positive reaction to their live show, they quickly dropped out of school and hit the road in a dilapidated old van.
"It really wasn't that tough of a decision for me," says Lloyd. "I was majoring in communications by day, and playing music around town at night. Realizing that I was cheating all aspects of my life by not concentrating on any one thing, I decided to do the band full-time." Luckily, the dropouts eased their parents' fears by releasing a self-titled indie album that went on to sell more than 10,000 copies -- just enough to attract the attention of Capricorn Records. Six years, four albums, and an AOR hit later (1993's "In a Daydream"), the Joneses have carved themselves a nice little niche and amassed a loyal and sizeable Deadhead-like following.
The band is celebrating their 30 year anniversary of “In a Daydream.”
New Jolla Phone Now Available for Pre-Order as an Independent Linux Phone
Dec. 7th, 2025 05:34 amRead more of this story at Slashdot.
Oxford's Term Of The Year: 'Rage Bait'
Dec. 7th, 2025 02:30 am
Roger J. Kreuz, University of Memphis
Which terms best represent 2025?
Every year, editors for publications ranging from the Oxford English Dictionary to the Macquarie Dictionary of Australian English select a “word of the year.”
Sometimes these terms are thematically related, particularly in the wake of world-altering events. “Pandemic,” “lockdown” and “coronavirus,” for example, were among the words chosen in 2020. At other times, they are a potpourri of various cultural trends, as with 2022’s “goblin mode,” “permacrisis” and “gaslighting.”

