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Magic Tomatoes

The priests did as they liked – Moctezuma had given them too much power – and now they could scarcely put two and two together, afflicted with the shakes from excess consumption of leg of sacrificial victim, and high as kites from stuffing themselves with mushrooms, cacti and magic tomatoes.

YOU DREAMED OF EMPIRES (UK) (US+)

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19oct25

On the road. One person will read this and say, “he’s finally wearing that watch outside!”

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NIGHT MUSIC: in a fugue state

in a fugue state by Joe Harvey-Whyte & Paul Cousins.

in a fugue state’ finds pedal-steel guitar maestro Joe Harvey-Whyte collaborating with tape loop sound scientist Paul Cousins on a warped ambient excursion into the subconscious. Originally written and recorded in one night, the eight tracks of hypnotic electro-acoustic music explore the concept of memory and time.

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KONSZTRUKTING SOUNDZ 18

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Low power this weekend, stuff to do. Newsletter goes out tomorrow, click here to join for free.

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Broadcasting House: 8

This entry is part 8 of 8 in the series Broadcasting House

Resurfacing this old blogchain.

I was reading it over earlier for the first time in years, which helpfully reminded me that IFTTT doesn’t connect well to this install due to being much more secure and I shouldn’t pay for IFTTT Pro to try and automate some nagging stuff.

As per part 7 of this chain, I had a programming guide for much of this year, but time and energy led me to let go of it – I wasn’t getting to much of the material I wanted to write in this space. And some fucked-up part of my back-brain always resists regimen and structure.

I found myself writing about the Chronofile on the newsletter that goes out on Sunday, in tandem with the current state of livestreaming – some people are livestreaming eight hours a day seven days a week. In comparison, elderblogs (thanks again for that one, Venkat) barely manage four posts a day and usually a hell of a lot less. Which is fine. Not everyone wants to read or write a chronofile – weeknotes are enough for most people.

Are there new tricks to be pulled with apparently deprecated tools? I dunno. I have a bunch of stuff I want to try, when I get the spare time and energy. In certain spaces, there’s talk again of what WordPress can do. And people are still building – Cozy Mode made me laugh.

So I’m back to thinking out loud to myself about all this some more.

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telemetry 17oct25

Le Jardin (S4E2)

Murayghat emerged after the decline of the so-called Chalcolithic culture (ca. 4500–3500 BCE), a period known for its domestic settlements, rich symbolic traditions, copper artifacts, and small cultic shrines.

Researchers believe that climate shifts and social disruptions may have led to the collapse of the culture, and in response, Early Bronze Age groups began creating new forms of ritual expression.

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HERESY: JESUS CHRIST AND THE OTHER SONS OF GOD, Catherine Nixey

Even when Jesus was small, the villagers realized there was something unusual about him. Perhaps it was because he showed a certain confidence – bordering on arrogance – in the way he spoke to adults. Or perhaps it was due to the way his parents, Mary and Joseph, treated him: with a respect that at times seemed to verge on anxiety. Or perhaps it was because he killed people.

Jesus was passing through his village when another small boy ran past and bumped him on the shoulder. It may have been an accident; it may not. Either way, Jesus was once again angered and uttered an ominously oblique curse. ‘You shall not go further on your way.’ His meaning became clear a moment later: the little boy fell down dead. These are the words of the Infancy Gospel of Thomas.

This is the story of very early Christianity, the things it took from to build itself, and the various versions of it that circulated back then. It’s an eye-opener.

…one ancient telling of the Nativity includes a Mary whose vagina can, and at one point does, roast human flesh. The text that contains this tale is in many ways very beautiful. At the moment of the birth of Jesus, the world quite literally stops turning: birds are stilled in mid-air; a shepherd who has raised his arm to strike his sheep becomes frozen, arm aloft; even the stars pause their nightly procession across the sky. Then, shortly after the birth of Jesus, a woman arrives at the familiar Nativity scene, with its ox and its ass, and – in a slightly less familiar twist to this story – inserts her hand into Mary’s vagina to test whether she really is a virgin. The woman’s hand is immediately burned off. ‘Woe,’ says the woman, as well she might.

And it’s that gospel from which we get the ox and the ass present at the Nativity. The gospels, odes and acts that didn’t make it into what we now know as the New Testament are really weird.

I’ve had this in the pile for a while, but, what with the recent missed Rapture and Peter Thiel apparently preaching about the Antichrist in a four-day closed conference the other week, I thought perhaps it was time I picked it up. Christianity had a long and strange journey, its story has been heavily edited over the millennia, and this is a book of what was left on the cutting-room floor.

As Robert Bellarmine, a sixteenth-century cardinal, Jesuit and inquisitor, put it, ‘I myself hardly ever read a book without feeling in the mood to give it a good censoring.’

Nixey is a terrific writer – I started reading her THE DARKENNG AGE years ago, but, honestly, it was so fucking sad I had to put it down again. This is a slightly less harrowing read, a little funnier (if darkly), and endlessly fascinating. Very recommended.

Also, this:

This, then, is a book about heresy and about how beliefs and ideas are violently silenced. But it is also about the ways in which people silence themselves. It is about the far more insidious ways in which things become first unwritable, then unsayable and finally unthinkable.

HERESY: JESUS CHRIST AND THE OTHER SONS OF GOD, Catherine Nixey (UK) (US+)

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17oct25

Random plant tray blows into the garden. Of course it’s a cat seat.

OPERATIONS: processed a new contract, waiting for the signature copy. Did one yesterday, too, which involved hitting Adobe Sign with hammers. Nailing the newsletter down. Thinking about what’s next.
STATUS: I’ve been washing and drying denim and now the whole house stinks of hot indigo dye. 8hrs 10m sleep, the mancub came to sit on my chest when I snoozed my alarm for ten minutes. I am accepting that I am tapped out for a while, and am deferring scripting until next week and trying to reconfigure a bit. I realise I haven’t even picked up my notebook in a week. Inbox 59 and dropping.
READING: THE BLAZING WORLD: A NEW HISTORY OF REVOLUTIONARY ENGLAND, Jonathan Healey (UK) (US+
LISTENING: Night Tracks

MISSION CONTROL: I can be contacted via the Cheng Caplan Company or Inkwell Management. Link in masthead to join my free newsletter.

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