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25 votes
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Pizza Hut reinstating the BOOK IT! program
48 votes -
Did Disney really steal Aladdin?
18 votes -
I wrote a book, and I'd love for you to read it!
40 votes -
Born into slavery, Adolf Ludvig Couschi Badin became part of the Swedish royal court and left a legacy of books and letters
9 votes -
Arcade Game Flyer perfect catalogue 懐かしのアーケードゲームカタログ(仮) (G-MOOK)
7 votes -
Suggest media in which the antagonist is an idea or an abstract concept rather than a person or intelligent entity
the two examples that I have are Final destination movies and junji ito's manga "Uzumaki". it doesn't have to be a manga or movie of course, I just would like something similar but it can be any...
the two examples that I have are Final destination movies and junji ito's manga "Uzumaki".
it doesn't have to be a manga or movie of course, I just would like something similar but it can be any medium. books, movies, games etc
48 votes -
Can a country get too rich? Norway shows the potential pitfalls of uncommon prosperity.
24 votes -
Moomins are the billion dollar comic franchise Americans don't know about
13 votes -
Enjoying reading in the age of LLMs
I used to really value the art of essay writing. There seemed to be such a richness in the different ways people would construct arguments, structure those arguments, then deliver those arguments...
I used to really value the art of essay writing. There seemed to be such a richness in the different ways people would construct arguments, structure those arguments, then deliver those arguments stylistically, not just from the perspective of being persuaded as a reader but also from the perspective of seeing how a given writer thinks, relates to the living tradition of language, and understands the world conceptually. But it's basically lost most of its meaning to me in this age of LLMs. The reality is, LLMs are capable of writing texts that, if you gave them to a seasoned reader 5 years ago, they'd say it was well written and indicative of a truly thoughtful mind. Even if there currently exist certain tells with LLMs, those styles certainly existed in different ways in real human writing beforehand. Now, those perfectly reasonable set of styles are verboten and we have to dedicate half our deep focus to figuring out whether, or to what extent, an essay or article was written by AI. It's difficult to enjoy, let alone care, about essay writing and the writers behind them now.
I can still find value in books, though, because they were written in the past and I don't mind never reading any non-scientific book published after 2022 if it comes down to it.
23 votes -
Erling Haaland donated a rare 16th-Century book of Viking sagas, worth £100,000, to be displayed in the library in the Norwegian town of Bryne, where he grew up
15 votes -
In Finland's small towns and rural areas, young people meet up to drive and hang out with their friends. Jussi Puikkonen spent five years photographing its idiosyncratic pace.
18 votes -
Galileo’s handwritten notes found in ancient astronomy text
15 votes -
The big lie about the origin of manga
15 votes -
Curious George shows us the stars
11 votes -
TV’s TV (1987) & TV Games Encyclopedia (1988)
11 votes -
I took coloring books way too seriously
8 votes -
Nikola Tesla's weird eating habits
10 votes -
Eight iconic Nordic homes throughout history that reveal the origins of Scandi style – all emerge from a distinctive vision of "soft modernism" that still influences how we live now
6 votes -
This award-winning bookstore looks like a portal to outer space
19 votes -
C'mon, professors, assign the hard reading
32 votes -
A brief history of men's underwear
25 votes -
Norway's approach to getting kids reading has much to teach us this year – from government support, to innovation with libraries themselves
13 votes -
A faceless hacker stole my therapy notes – Meri-Tuuli was one of 33,000 Vastaamo patients held to ransom in October 2020 by a Finnish hacker
16 votes -
My favorite media of 2025
24 votes -
Why rare book rooms are the best-kept secret for travelers who love history
11 votes -
Reading Lolita in the barracks
22 votes -
Share weird crossovers, cameos and in-universe references to help map out ridiculous shared universes!
This is one of those posts that make me wish we could tag multiple tildes. Because this would apply to ~tv, ~movies, ~comics, ~games, ~books, and ~anime, with possibly even more. A long time ago I...
This is one of those posts that make me wish we could tag multiple tildes. Because this would apply to ~tv, ~movies, ~comics, ~games, ~books, and ~anime, with possibly even more.
A long time ago I read an article about weird crossovers, and it made the point that thanks to unrelated crossovers and six degrees of separation, the Archie comics Sonic technically existed in the same universe as... Some popular live action shows, because that show had a crossover with some other show that crossed over with Sonic. Obviously not really, but it was a funny thought.
I failed to find the article I remember, but my brief search did bring up the Tommy Westphall Shared Universe, which comprises 400+ shows thanks to various crossovers, cameos and in-universe references. There is a whole fandom wiki dedicated to it. There's also this site that lets you search for connections between TV shows. The site's description from DuckDuckGo is "Easily search and find the relationship between shows in the Tommy Westphall Universe and beyond." It's silly, but fun!
Thing is, most of my cursory searching into it has people focus on live-action TV and movies. And... Well, like I said at the start: the article I remember reading made a connection between Archie comics Sonic and some live-action show thanks to some crossover.
Since that first article, I've wondered off and on about the weirdest crossovers out there, and just how weird of a shared universe could exist. I don't want to limit it to one or two mediums, I want to find crossovers that can transcend mediums! Comics, TV, games and more!
So: what are the weirdest crossovers, cameos and in-universe connections you know of? What are the wildest connections we can make? And, for bonus fun, what are the ramifications of shoving all these wildly different series into one ridiculous universe??
how many different apocalypses can we shove into it16 votes -
A history of PG&E and how we got here
15 votes -
New documentary about Astrid Lindgren released in Europe - ‘The antithesis to Nazi ideology’: how Pippi Longstocking was born to stand up to Adolf Hitler
10 votes -
Book reviews: The Land Trap and Land Power
2 votes -
Fairy tales contain useful lessons for navigating our interactions with the internet
28 votes -
One of Sweden's most famous literary characters, Pippi Longstocking, turns 80 years old today
22 votes -
A field guide to writing styles
10 votes -
Is trying to become an author insane in times of LLMs?
A simple question. I know LLMs are currently not a replacement for authors. Will that remain true in 5 to 10 years? EDIT: No. I never expected to earn a living either mostly or exclusively by...
A simple question. I know LLMs are currently not a replacement for authors. Will that remain true in 5 to 10 years?
EDIT: No. I never expected to earn a living either mostly or exclusively by selling books. There are however many "side gigs" in my country that can greatly benefit from being published by a real company. Ultimately though, I'm not in it primarily for the money. But I wonder what the future holds for fiction as a whole.
21 votes -
Former PM Katrín Jakobsdóttir has said the Icelandic language could be wiped out in as little as a generation due to the sweeping rise of AI and encroaching English language dominance
18 votes -
“Depression era” water pie
15 votes -
Move over, Alan Turing: meet the working-class hero of Bletchley Park you didn’t see in the movies
13 votes -
In an extract from their new book, international referee Jonas Eriksson describes how top officials were made to strip down to be weighed and have their body fat checked
11 votes -
The architecture of open source applications
12 votes -
A review of the book "The War on Science"
17 votes -
Swedish tennis legend Björn Borg says he takes life "day by day, year by year" after being diagnosed with extremely aggressive prostate cancer
9 votes -
Robert Munsch, Canadian children’s author, approved for medical assistance in dying
30 votes -
The CRPG Book
21 votes -
Announcing Ultimate Anime - the Beyond Ghibli book
7 votes -
ReTuna shopping mall in Sweden is the first in the world to sell only secondhand and repurposed items – established in 2015, it's a municipality-led experiment in circular consumption
25 votes -
Review: Cuisine and Empire, by Rachel Laudan
7 votes -
The Doom novels were crazy
11 votes -
Public domain technical books published before 1964
16 votes -
First fall: Boundaries of the existential self, part 1
7 votes