Deeper thought 💠on Hostiles on the hill - Bad Lip Reading →
I have always enjoyed Bad Lip Reading’s political videos, but this Star Wars one is just a delight!
Shopping list for Snowmaggedon 2018:
Everything else is secondary.
I have adjusted things on my website to incorporate my microblog content on the main page. Just need to remember to put the right tag on things.
Setup 2FA on Twitter and moved that password to the wife’s 1password vault. Looks like it is Micro.blog for 2018.
2018: I am seriously considering enabling 2FA on Twitter, but adding the 2FA OTP to my wife’s 1Password, so i cant access it.
I don’t want to delete my account, but I don’t want to access it.
I have always enjoyed Bad Lip Reading’s political videos, but this Star Wars one is just a delight!
I have been a voracious podcast listener since This Week In Tech first premiered in 2005(!). Podcasting has exploded into a beautiful ecosystem of daily and weekly podcasts and long form serialized stories told in a weekly increments. I love all of it.
When I first started listening to podcasts on the iPhone, I listened in Downcast, I dabbled with Instacast (RIP), I’ve tried PocketCasts. Eventually, I settled on Overcast. Overcast is a great podcast player, but I had a hard time managing the combination of daily and weekly episodes as well as the long form season at a time podcasts. I’m sure this could be managed with better smart playlists, but I needed a fresh start.
I switched to Castro. I love Castro’s inbox metaphor. I find it works really well managing the flow of daily and weekly podcasts. Unfortunately, the inbox metaphor doesn’t work well for grouping a whole season of episodes, so I am continuing to use Overcast for the serialized, long form shows, think S-Town, Serial, or The Butterfly Effect.
The funny thing about listening to a lot of podcasts is that I find myself recommending podcasts to a lot of people. Because of this, the people in my life start listening to podcasts. My wife is now a podcast listener, and my kids are becoming podcast listeners too. There are some wonderful kid focused podcasts including Wow in the World, Brains On!, and Story Pirates. These are shows we listen to together and we can talk about their content. It is always funny to have a child tell you about something they heard in a podcast when the topic is in a context that is appropriate to them. We have had plenty of good conversations about capsicum after a Wow in the World about what makes spicy things spicy.
Listening to these podcasts together is fun, but can be hard to manage with two adults and two kids who has listened to what episode, how far in were we the last time we listened. In addition, if we want to listen in the kitchen and dining room on a Saturday morning while we are making pancakes, it isn’t exactly conducive to have a podcast playing from a phone’s speakers. We have a great Sonos speaker setup, but until Sonos supports AirPlay 2, I have been at a loss for how to leverage my fancy speaker system.
Enter PocketCasts.
PocketCasts, which is a fine podcast app in itself, works with Sonos speakers. We have few Sonos speakers in the house and being able to play the kid friendly podcasts over them is perfect. In addition, there are podcasts that my wife and I can listen to together and it is no big deal if the kids wander in on them.
Three podcasts apps to support all of my listening: Castro for me, Overcast for long form content, PocketCasts for kid and house friendly listening. If I had to make due with just one, I would pick Overcast. For now I will continue with this experiment of three podcast players.
Another documentary in my documentary kick that was captivating is Icarus. I started watching this thinking I was watching one movie, but then, like a very good documentary, it took a turn into a story that was far more interesting than the first one.
The timing of me watching this was also very interesting. Let’s say, a movie that I thought was about doping on the Tour de France joined up with the news that Russia will not be allowed to compete in the upcoming Winter Olympics.
You guys?! Disney now owns Die Hard!
I have been on a documentary kick recently. Maybe it is a push back against some reality TV that has been on in the house. Maybe it is because there seem to be more filtering into my Netflix recommendations and other media streams. I have always wanted to understand wine better. To better understand the flavors that people get from the wine, to understand what grapes go into making what wines from what part of the world, to understand why it can cost so much.
A documentary that snuck up on me was Sour Grapes. An incredibly well crafted documentary directed by Reuben Atlas and Jerry Rothwell weaves a complex tale that did not end up where I thought it would. To invoke the CGP Grey spoiler policy, I will not say anything more, but highly recommend giving it a watch, whether you like wine or not.