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mpirnat, (edited ) to random
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

Inspired by a thing I saw on Reddit earlier today, I’m going to try listening to more complete albums this year. Maybe daily? We’ll see how it shakes out.

I’m starting off with the 2019 mix of Abbey Road by The Beatles: https://songwhip.com/the-beatles/abbey-road-2019-mix

1/366

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar
mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

#AnAlbumADay 152/366: The Loop by Volkor X

Can I offer you a sci-fi synthwave epic on this Friday night? There’s also an instrumental version if you’re less interested in the story.

https://songwhip.com/volkor-x/the-loop

#music #NowPlaying

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

#AnAlbumADay 153/366: Artifact by Waveshaper

Catching up with yesterday’s listen.

https://songwhip.com/waveshaper/artifact

#music #NowPlaying

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

154/366: Skylarking by XTC

Catching up with yesterday's listen. I'm super familiar with closing track "Dear God", but I'd never gotten around to listening to the rest of this. Good not-quite-summer weekend sounds.

https://songwhip.com/xtc/skylarking

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

155/366: Solid State Survivor by Yellow Magic Orchestra

Catching up with yesterday's listen. This was a cool discovery that I came across when not wanting to pick a "Y" artist that I felt was too easy or well known. They kind of remind me of Space and Kraftwerk.

https://songwhip.com/yellowmagicorchestra/solid-state-survivor

tek, to random
@tek@freeradical.zone avatar

“Severance” s1, e8: What. The. Actual. Fuck.

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@tek 🧇🎉

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@tek Buckle up, S1E9 is a doozy.

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@tek Cool, didn't know if you’d watched it yet. :-)

I don't think I breathed for most of E9. Maybe the most intense TV episode I've ever experienced.

Lana, to queer
@Lana@beige.party avatar

On the 20th of May, 1810, a member of the French nobility died. And nobody, including the attending physician who examined the body, knew what to write on their death certificate.

The Chevalier d'Eon had always had a naturally androgenous appearance, a fact which they capitalized on frequently throughout their life. The child of a minor French nobleman, d'Eon enjoyed the benefits of an education, excelling in school, and earning a law degree. After school, they took work as a political writer for a time, and then became secretary to a series of Parisian administrators, working in areas of finance as well as in history and literature.

But in 1756, they joined a secret network of spies known only to King Louis XV, and working without the official knowledge or sanction of the French government. d'Eon's mission was to infiltrate the court of Empress Elizabeth of Russia, and there, conspire with members of a pro-French faction of the Russian government against the Habsburg monarchy of Austria. At the time, Russian border crossings were restricted only to women and children. So, according to d'Eon's memoirs, they were forced to pass convincingly as a woman or risk execution. Thus disguised as "the Lady Beaumont", they served as maid of honor to the Empress.

Years later, d'Eon returned to France, awarded an enormous sum of money for their service to the King, and became Captain of Dragoons - a military title involving mounted cavalry. Later, they served in the Seven Years' War against England. When the war ended, d'Eon themself drafted the peace treaty, and was awarded another handsome sum of money for their efforts, receiving the title "Chevalier" - a French title of nobility roughly translating to "Knight".

In 1763, a series of political machinations saw d'Eon embroiled in a scandal. Having lived in London now for years, d'Eon published a series of letters detailing some (though not all) of their secret dealings as a spy. This breach of diplomatic discretion was scandalous in the extreme, but secured them the sympathy of the English public. In these letters, d'Eon claimed that the new ambassador to England, a man named Guerchy, had tried to poison them at a dinner. Guerchy sued for libel, and d'Eon strangely offered no defense at the trial. They were thus declared an outlaw and went into hiding. Eventually, Louis XV granted d'Éon a pension (possibly a pay-off for d'Éon's silence) and a 12,000-livre annuity, but refused a request to pay off the rest of their debts. d'Eon continued to work as a spy for Louis XV, but lived in political exile in London.

And here is where our story truly begins to get strange.

It was around this time that rumors began circulating in London that d'Eon was actually a woman, despite the fact that they routinely wore their military dragoons uniform, and claimed to be, and have always been a man. A betting pool over their true gender was started on the London Stock Exchange. d'Eon was invited to participate but declined, stating that an examination would be dishonoring whatever the result. After a year without any further updates, the wager was abandoned and the monies returned.

Then, in 1774, King Louis XV died, and d'Eon, sensing an opportunity to return to their homeland, attempted to negotiate an end to their exile. The resulting twenty page treaty permitted d'Eon to return to France, but demanded that they turn over any documents and correspondence from their time as a spy under Louis XV. Additionally, a clause in the treaty demanded that they present themselves as female during the voyage.

So the Chevalier d'Eon, now stylizing themself as the Chevalière d'Eon (a feminized form of the title given to them by Louis XV at the end of the war), and wearing their dragoon uniform, began making plans to return to France. However, now claiming to have always been a woman, they demanded recognition by the French government as such. They claimed that their father had to raise them as a boy, because his father could only inherit from his in-laws if he had a son. King Louis XVI complied with this demand, but required in turn that d'Eon no longer wear the military uniform and instead dress as a woman. Included with the offer was a substantial sum of money for a complete women's wardrobe. Whether it was because d'Eon really was assigned female at birth, as they claimed, or whether it was merely the money and station offered by the new King, d'Eon agreed. So, d'Eon returned to France a woman, and as punishment, was summarily banished to Tonnerre.

For the rest of their life, d'Eon would maintain this presentation, even offering to join with the Americans in the War of Independence, leading a battalion of female fighters against England, though their banishment ultimately prevented it. During this time there are accounts of the Chevalière d'Eon fencing, fighting, and participating in duels with other French nobility, always presenting as the woman they claimed to always have been. After the French Revolution, the king's pension vanished, and d'Eon was forced to sell much of their possessions to survive - though they did not give up their female attire. In 1809 at the age of 80, d'Eon suffered a fall and became paralyzed and bedridden. They died in poverty in 1810 at the age of 81.

But their story doesn't quite end there.

The surgeon who examined d'Éon's body after their death attested in their post-mortem certificate that d'Eon had "male organs in every respect perfectly formed", while at the same time displaying feminine characteristics such as "unusual roundness in the formation of limbs", as well as "breasts remarkably full". Though buried in an unmarked pauper's grave, there exists to this day a memorial in London listing the Chevalier d'Eon as one of the important graves lost to time.

Even by modern standards, the Chevalier/Chevalière d'Eon's gender identity is a bit of an enigma. Some have suggested they may have been intersex. Some choose to interpret their story as transgender or gender fluidity. Some have even coined a term - "eonism" - to describe similar cases of gender nonconformity.

Tell our stories.

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@brainwane Oh, hey! We just finished watching that too. It was our introduction to d’Eon as well. Lana’s post was very pleasantly timely for filling in context.

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@Lana @brainwane It’s streaming on AppleTV+. It just wrapped up recently so the whole thing is now available.

dabeaz, to random
@dabeaz@mastodon.social avatar

Trying to think about why I rather enjoyed the Furiosa Mad Max movie as opposed to all of the hate I had towards the Dune movie. Maybe it's the fact that Mad Max just leaned into it and said "let's actually not explain the insanity of what's happening by making it even more insane" whereas Dune tried to explain what was happening with a bunch of inaudible whispering and mystical mumble jumble. Should have just had war rigs battling sandworms or something...

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@dabeaz @palendae IIRC Miller’s process (or at least for Fury Road) starts with the storyboards, basically a gigantic graphic novel.

bitprophet, (edited ) to macos
@bitprophet@social.coop avatar

Fed up with #macOS' #Spotlight. No fuzzyfinder, in 2024; no real drilldown; the way it organizes/sorts results are unintuitive. I shouldn't have to remember what /format/ a document is to go "oh right I oughtta scroll down a bunch to see PDFs” 😩

What's good for alternative launcher/finder tools these days? AFAIK, it's still down to the same candidates from ~10ya, ie #Alfred, #Quicksilver, #Launchbar? (EDIT: Raycast enters the chat! Tho its AI focus is worrying.)

See poll!

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@hynek @bitprophet Good to know, thanks! I haven't had energy or motivation enough to compare it to Alfred.

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@bitprophet @nik The power pack has been worth it for me, fwiw.

Lana, to random
@Lana@beige.party avatar

I'd like to personally congratulate convicted felon Donald J Trump for finally winning the popular vote

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@Lana Unanimously, no less!

jhpot, to random
@jhpot@mastodon.social avatar

Wikipedia moves fast

mpirnat,
@mpirnat@mas.to avatar

@jhpot I miss when Trump's 2016 campaign website had an injection vulnerability where you could basically make the homepage have an h1 with whatever text you wanted just by messing with the URL. That was a day of such innocent joy.

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