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I don’t know if I have the words to describe how powerful Come See Me in the Good Light was for me, but I thought it was a masterpiece of documentary film work, and Andrea Gibson was a truly unique person who lived an amazing life, even as they were dying of cancer. (If you read my piece “We Go To The Dump” yesterday, you might have already watched this trailer—or, I guess, if you paid attention to the 2026 Academy Award nominations for Best Documentary Feature)
This is a pretty fascinating article about why phrases like “Satanic panic” and “brain drain” catch on and take root in our language so well—which is, duh, because they rhyme. It made me think of the term “wifi,” and how we’ve all just accepted it as an abbreviation for “wireless internet,” even though it clearly is a play on the word “hifi,” which means high fidelity, which is a sound thing, not an internet connectivity thing. (via Kottke)
This McSweeney’s piece of course started as satire about a political thing, but I think it’s such a brilliant idea that is hilarious even if you don’t know anything about the news item that inspired it: I, Sisyphus, Am Ninety-Five Percent Of The Way There
This is a fun piece by my friend Blake, who is doing a bike-powered book tour with his new book, Dirtbag Rich (which I have mentioned here before since I drew a couple illustrations for it). He titled it “15 Moments of Zen in Southern Utah,” and I think it’s an interesting approach to a trip report.
Here's a helpful reminder/encouragement to go ahead and have that third coffee of the day that you’ve been thinking about.
The Atlantic periodically highlights stories from its archives, and this one is from the October 1949 issue (I’m not sure if the original title was actually just “Pizza”?). I thought was a really interesting read because it’s hard to imagine a time in which a journalist pitched a story to an editor at the Atlantic that was basically, “There’s this new food called ‘pizza,’ and I think it’s newsworthy.” My favorite part was probably this: “Regardless of what you may read, you cannot make pizza at home. Not unless you have a brick oven, two wooden shovels, and the knack of making a hard dough and twirling it out to twice its size. You may be able to make a concoction of tomatoes and cheese, but not real pizza.” [GIFT LINK]
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Writer, artist, filmmaker, columnist for Outside Magazine. My newsletter about creativity, adventure, and enthusiasm goes out to 15,000+ subscribers every week.
We Go To The Dump Seagulls, my brain announced, as I stared out the window of my little old Toyota pickup, waiting behind another truck at the entrance to the dump. Seagulls, at the dump? I asked myself, and then when the truck in front of me moved, I pulled ahead to check in with the lady at the entrance building. At the drive-up window, they weigh your vehicle, and you have to tell them what you have in your truck. This time, it was some old plywood, some chunks of foamboard insulation,...
Friday Inspiration 539 I haven’t watched that many TED talks recently, but the title of this one pulled me in and I have to say it did not disappoint: The Accidental Brilliance of Makeshift Signs (video) So basically this guy posed a question about highway design on Threads, and almost no one even attempted to give him a legitimate answer, but the comments just keep delivering more and more jokes, which are I think even more rewarding (my favorite is probably the cardigan with one giant...
Friday Inspiration 538 Fred Again.. uploaded the audio from every concert on his USB002 tour (October 3 2025-February 27 2026), and at 108 hours, it is probably the longest YouTube “video” in history (there’s no real video, just a static image). I am only about five hours into it but have told more than one friend that it it my favorite live album ever. (video) My friend Anna sent me this: A website that takes the current weather conditions of where you live (or whatever city you enter in the...