John E. Branch Jr.
@johnebranchjr.bsky.social
21 followers 26 following 30 posts
5th-gen. Texan now in NY. Into tech & culture. Blog at https://ifitbenotnow.wordpress.com/
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Jane Goodall did this (from the Economist obituary): “Amid the shrieking and hooting all around her, she took time to gaze in awe at the beauty of dappled sunlight through the canopy of trees.”
Still thinking about this, from Louis Menand in the 11/18/24 New Yorker. Is this why reading for pleasure has declined over the last two decades or so?
Text that says: It didn’t last. Frank thinks that the novel ran out of currency thirty years ago. Novelists, in his view, are no longer pushing the envelope. I’m not sure that’s so. What does seem true, though, is that the novel is no longer at the center of the cultural conversation. People don’t ask today, “What are you reading?” They ask, “What are you streaming?” The television series is the middle-class entertainment medium of the twenty-first century. Or maybe it was, since people are already writing about the end of a golden age of television that began with shows like “The Sopranos” and “The Wire.”
The Bing.com landing page for today shows a Labor Day parade in Chicago from 1915. The image is different every day but is always an opportunity to pause, look, think or feel. I use Bing much of the time, and this is one reason why.
Stitched into history
May 1915: Chicago buzzes with energy. Streetcars p
Bing.com
From an 8/21/25 NYT article by Gia Kourlas about a choreographer named Kim Brandt and her planning of a dance for the Rockaway Beach Sessions, called Wayward.

See www.nytimes.com/2025/08/21/a... (prob sub only).
Text that says: In naming her dance “Wayward,” Brandt is thinking less about a wayward child than finding yourself off the beaten path — a little askew, a little off. She read an entry in the Oxford English Dictionary, a translation of Thucydides, that has stuck with her as she choreographed her dance: “The movement of events is often as wayward and incomprehensible as the course of human thought.”
(2/2) Along with showcasing Tudyk, the show has other virtues, namely its people. Thank you to all involved, including these found on X: Sara Tomko (@actresssaratomko), Meredith Garretson (@meregarretson), Jenna Lamia (@JennaLamia), and creator Chris Sheridan (@Sheridalien).
(1/2) Alan Tudyk’s work in Resident Alien (@ResidentAlien) is a model of its kind. Funny voices, funny walks (made light of in the final episode), funny expressions and gestures, funny elements of timing: they may sound like gimmicks, but for Tudyk they’re instruments in an orchestra.
After an apocalypse, you’ll have more time for reading books. Just be careful not to break your glasses. (H/t Twilight Zone)
Atomic glow-shrimp! Kids, who wants atomic glow-shrimp? I do, I do!
You may not be interested in AI, but AI is interested in you. As I believe Leon Trotsky, that famously forward-looking guy, first observed.
Terry Riley and Claire Chase are two good reasons to go out!
“Meanwhile, the international situation, as usual, was desperate.” Tom Robbins has a thought for every occasion. If it’s always the same thought, maybe that’s because, regrettably, it’s always the same occasion. Tension, conflict, war drums…
I might actually want to read the Andy Weir book on this list (but with some trepidation). Too bad it doesn’t exist.

Chicago paper's "reading list" full of fake, likely AI-generated titles www.axios.com/2025/05/20/a... #axiosai (H/t to @inafried.bsky.social )
Chicago paper's "reading list" full of fake, likely AI-generated titles
You have to read down the list of 15 titles to the eleventh entry before you hit a real book .
www.axios.com
Standard citation rules don’t call for crediting the designer of a book or a magazine piece, but design can affect the experience and may even be essential. Example: DFW’s “Host” essay. Another example: wwnorton.com/books/978163...
Here’s to designers, who are the mother of many of our delights.
The Annotated Arabian Nights
“[A]n electric new translation . . . Each page is adorned with illustrations and photographs from other translations and adaptations of the tales, as well as a wonderfully detailed cascade of no...
wwnorton.com
Yesterday on Bluesky, I saw a link to a peer-reviewed research paper titled “ChatGPT is bullshit.” I’m afraid I’ll hear next that those who think AI is being “unfairly treated” will start a new movement: Make AI Great Again, or MAIGA.
Amazon, tired of all those Starlink satellites cluttering the view of the sky from Earth, has begun sending up its own satellites to clutter more of the view. I’m thinking of launching thousands of pieces of cardboard, positioned so as to block the view of all their satellites.
I don’t know about cholera, but love in a time of leaf blowers is a very vexing thing.
In the category of New York Times headlines that are halfway to being Onion headlines: “Police Seek Man Who They Say Violated a Corpse on an R Train.” Personally, what I want to know is why the corpse was taking the R.
There’s a Goodwill store in San Jose. I just received a used book from it. I wonder what life is like for those in the lower half of the Silicon Valley tech boom.
Today I talked to a Grammarly colleague who lives and works in Ukraine. He wouldn’t speculate on an end to the war, maybe b/c we were on work time. He just said they’ve gotten used to it. Which is a terrible thing to hear, really.
Merriam-Webster defines a startup as “a fledgling business enterprise.” The other day, I saw OpenAI called a startup; other well-established and highly valued tech businesses often get the same label. Something about this is funny…