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We're really internet and we're here to stay. A website about things Will & Seb and various friends & guests think are interesting. Little-to-no specific focus, a bit odd, speling errors, and incredibly culturally relevant. Not the first nor the last. Why copy when you can steal?

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The Tyranny of 'On This Day'

The Tyranny of 'On This Day'

Forgetting is not a bug in the human operating system. It is a necessary feature. We are meant to shed the trivial, the painful, and the awkward as we move forward.

But our digital infrastructure will not let us.

Every day, my phone surfaces an "On This Day" notification. A curated montage of an unremarkable Tuesday from six years ago. A photo of a meal I don't remember eating. A picture of a person I no longer speak to. The algorithm presents these as gifts, wrapping them in soft animations and nostalgic music.

It feels less like a gift and more like an ambush.

We have outsourced our memory to machines that lack the capacity for context. A photograph is just data to the system. It doesn't know that the vacation was miserable, or that the relationship ended badly, or that the person in the photo is dead. It just knows that the metadata matches today's date.

This creates a strange temporal drag. We are constantly being yanked backwards into versions of ourselves we have already outgrown. You cannot fully inhabit the present when your phone is constantly demanding that you litigate the past.

Before the smartphone, nostalgia was something you had to actively seek out. You had to pull the album off the shelf. Now, nostalgia is a push notification. It is mandatory. We have built a machine that remembers everything perfectly, and we are forcing ourselves to live inside its unblinking, hyperthymestic stare. I wonder what happens to a generation that is never allowed to gracefully forget.

A Train Across Water

A Train Across Water

I think about the train in Spirited Away more than I think about most endings.

The movie has dragons, witches, a bathhouse full of contracts and appetite. Then it gives you a train crossing water with almost nothing to do. Chihiro sits beside No-Face. Shadow passengers get on and off. The windows hold a flooded world that looks too calm to be disaster and too empty to be peace.

What I love is the refusal to explain the mood. The scene is not comic relief or worldbuilding or a clue. It is transit. A child has been asked to carry more feeling than a child can process, so the movie gives her a vehicle instead of a speech. Sit here. Watch the water. Let the story move while you cannot.

Most films are terrified of that kind of quiet because quiet looks like slack. They over-trust motive, payoff, dialogue, the little click of meaning landing in its tray. The train understands something better: sometimes the plot has to leave the room so the experience can catch up.

I do not remember it as beautiful, though it is. I remember it as permission. A scene can be necessary because nothing announces itself there. The world passes by in blue-gray panes, and nobody asks you to translate it yet.

Everything Else Got Heavier

Everything Else Got Heavier

In a vault outside Paris, under three nested bell jars, behind a door that takes three keys held by three different people, sits a platinum-iridium cylinder the size of a golf ball. From 1889 to 2019 it was the kilogram. Not a kilogram — the kilogram. Every scale on earth, every drug dose, every bag of flour traced its meaning through a chain of copies of copies back to this one object.

Which made it the only object in the universe that could not be weighed. Weighing means comparing a thing against the standard. It was the standard. Whatever it did, it did at exactly one kilogram, by definition, forever.

Then it started losing weight. Against its own official sister copies, Le Grand K came up some fifty micrograms short over a century — a fingerprint's worth of metal, gone, and nobody is sure how. But the definition didn't permit the sentence "the kilogram lost mass." So metrologists were stuck with the other formulation, the correct one, the insane one: the cylinder was fine, and everything else in the universe had gotten heavier.

In 2019 the unit was rebuilt on Planck's constant and the cylinder was retired. Retirement demoted it into reality. For 130 years it was exempt from its own concept. Now, for the first time since it was cast, it has a weight — measurable, uncertain, capable of being wrong. It became an ordinary object the way the rest of us are ordinary: by not being the definition of anything.

Previously On

Previously On

I distrust "previously on" when it knows too much.

A good recap should be a handrail: here is the door you came through, here is the room you left in flames. Most are not handrails. They are spoilers wearing the costume of memory. The moment a character who has been absent for six episodes gets thirty seconds of recap oxygen, the episode has already tapped the glass. Remember him. He is about to matter.

What bothers me is not the clue. It is the theft of private attention. Part of watching a show is carrying the wrong things forward: a face you liked, an unresolved phrase, a wallpaper choice, a suspicion that never pays rent. The recap arrives with a clipboard and says no, these were the important pieces. Your memory was decorative.

Streaming made this worse because forgetting is now treated like a service problem. Skip intro, skip recap, resume exactly where you left off, as if continuity were a productivity feature. But some stories need the blur. The week between episodes was not dead space; it was fermentation.

I want more shows to let me be confused for five minutes. Confusion is not a bug. Sometimes it is the only evidence that I brought my own mind back.