For all my bug lovers out there 🐛❤️
are you a horror fan, getting into the genre, or just looking for something to watch? here’s a bunch of links to some horror films and shows (both good and bad cuz i felt obligated to put whole franchises in here) for everyone to enjoy!!!! or hate!!!! always remember: being a horror fan is watching god awful movies to find the good ones that will change your life
halloween (1978)
halloween 2 (1981)
halloween 3: season of the witch (1982)
halloween 4: the return of michael myers (1988)
halloween 5: the revenge of michael myers (1989)
halloween: the curse of michael myers (1995)
halloween h20: 20 years later (1998)
halloween: resurrection (2002)
halloween (2018)
halloween kills (2021)
candyman (1992)
candyman: farewell to the flesh (1995)
candyman: day of the dead (1999)
candyman (2021)
the evil dead (1981)
evil dead 2 (1987)
army of darkness (1992)
evil dead (2013)
ash vs evil dead (2015-2018)
scream (1996)
scream 2 (1997)
scream 3 (2000)
scream 4 (2011)
scream (2022)
night of the living dead (1968)
dawn of the dead (1978)
day of the dead (1985)
child’s play (1988)
child’s play 2 (1990)
child’s play 3 (1991)
bride of chucky (1998)
seed of chucky (2004)
curse of chucky (2013)
cult of chucky (2017)
chucky (2021-ongoing)
the texas chainsaw massacre (1974)
the texas chainsaw massacre 2 (1986)
leatherface: the texas chainsaw massacre 3 (1990)
texas chainsaw massacre: the next generation (1995)
the texas chainsaw massacre (2003)
the texas chainsaw massacre: the beginning (2006)
texas chainsaw 3d (2013)
leatherface (2017)
texas chainsaw massacre (2022)
saw (2004)
saw 2 (2005)
saw 3 (2006)
saw 4 (2007)
saw 5 (2008)
saw 6 (2009)
saw 3d (2010)
jigsaw (2017)
spiral: from the book of saw (2021)
ringu (1998)
ringu 2 (1999)
ringu 0: birthday (2000)
a nightmare on elm street (1984)
a nightmare on elm street 2: freddy’s revenge (1985)
a nightmare on elm street 3: dream warriors (1987)
a nightmare on elm street 4: the dream master (1988)
a nightmare on elm street 5: the dream child (1989)
freddy’s dead: the final nightmare (1991)
wes craven’s new nightmare (1994)
freddy vs jason (2003)
friday the 13th (1980)
friday the 13th part 2 (1981)
friday the 13th part 3 (1982)
friday the 13th: the final chapter (1984)
friday the 13th: a new beginning (1985)
friday the 13th part 6: jason lives (1986)
friday the 13th part 7: the new blood (1988)
friday the 13th part 8: jason takes manhattan (1989)
jason goes to hell: the final friday (1993)
jason x (2002)
hellraiser (1987)
hellbound: hellraiser 2 (1988)
hellraiser 3: hell on earth (1992)
hellraiser: bloodline (1996)
alien (1979)
aliens (1986)
alien 3 (1992)
alien resurrection (1997)
predator (1987)
predator 2 (1990)
predators (2010)
prey (2022)
house of 1000 corpses (2003)
the devil’s rejects (2005)
3 from hell (2019)
fear street part one: 1994 (2021)
fear street part two: 1978 (2021)
fear street part three: 1666 (2021)
the strangers (2008)
the strangers: prey at night (2018)
a quiet place (2018)
a quiet place part 2 (2021)
the silence of the lambs (1991)
hannibal (2013-2015)
get out (2017)
us (2019)
nope (2022)
perfect blue (1997)
killer klowns from outer space (1988)
the thing (1982)
carrie (1976)
the shining (1980)
doctor sleep (2019)
pet sematary (1989)
it (2017)
it chapter 2 (2019)
trick ‘r treat (2007)
suspiria (1977)
black christmas (1974)
my bloody valentine (1981)
american psycho (2000)
el hoyo (2019)
shaun of the dead (2004)
train to busan (2016)
resident evil: welcome to raccoon city (2021)
hereditary (2018)
jennifer’s body (2009)
the lighthouse (2019)
little shop of horrors (1986)
orphan (2009)
spree (2020)
re-animator (1985)
wolf creek (2005)
freaky (2020)
bloody birthday (1981)
scary stories to tell in the dark (2019)
mandy (2018)
the cabin in the woods (2012)
ready or not (2019)
10 cloverfield lane (2016)
the blair witch project (1999)
possum (2018)
the exorcist (1973)
stranger things (2016-ongoing)
the twilight zone (1959-1964)
twin peaks (1990-1991)
oh boy here comes the new year!! to ensure a good start to 2021, take this. he'll be your friend through thick and thin :)
Enjoyed your Book Riot post “11 Amazing Books About the Wonder of Trees.” You mentioned “there is a lot of fantastic nature writing by authors of color.” Could you recommend some titles or authors? I’ve read a few, but want to read more. Thanks!
Yes of course! Top is of course Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer, which blew me away.
But there's a long list of other books I came across in my research that looked amazing and interesting, but didn't fit the more narrow subject of my list. I added these books to my own to-read list!
Trace: Memory, History, Race, and the American Landscape by Lauret Savoy
There’s Something In The Water: Environmental Racism in Indigenous & Black Communities by Ingrid RG Waldron
The Unlikely Thru-Hiker By Derick Lugo
The Adventure Gap by James Edward Mills
As Long As Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice from Colonization to Standing Rock by Dina Gilio-Whitaker
Soil Not Oil: Environmental Justice in an Age of Climate Crisis by Vandana Shiva
Green Deen: What Islam Teaches About Protecting the Planet by Ibrahim Abdul-Matin
Rooted in the Earth: Reclaiming the African American Environmental Heritage by Dianne D. Glave
Sustainable South Bronx: A Model for Environmental Justice by Majora Carter
Clean and White: A History of Environmental Racism in the United States by Carl A. Zimring
Black Faces, White Spaces by Carolyn Finney
The Colors of Nature: Culture, Identity, and the Natural World - note: the editor is not BIPOC, but the book is: "essays from authors representing diverse backgrounds, including Japanese American, Mestizo, African American, Hawaiian, Arab American, Chicano and Native American"
Is the fur on some bugs (like bees or caterpillars or moths) an example of convergent evolution with mammals or is the fur on those bugs not fur but something else?
I suppose any fibrous body coating like bird feathers, mammalian fur, or arthropod setae used for protection/insulation/sensation etc could be considered convergence on a functional level, but insect “hair” is an entirely different material!
arthropod setae are made of chitin (a polysaccharide), while your hair is made of keratin (a protein). setae can have many different forms, such as stiff bristles, sensory hairs, or the scales on butterflies, moths, and other arthropods. here is a good resource if you’d like to read about the various types of setae and their functions:
OK, so I've been knitting since 2010, and I just learned 2 things.
[1] Magic loop was invented around 2002
[2] Circular needles were invented in the 1910s
That means that, if you were knitting as recently as just over 100 years ago, you either were knitting with straight needles or with double points
??????????????
I fucking hate straight needles, and I fucking despise double points [personally, I know not everyone does]
I like to imagine knitting as this craft that goes back hundreds of years and connects me to history and all that. And in some ways it is
But then I find out that I've been ALIVE longer than the magic loop method? If my grandmother had been able to teach me to knit [she died around the time I was born but was apparently a very experienced knitter], she wouldn't have even known what magic loop was???????
I also wonder if I would have even liked knitting at all If I was stuck with straight needles and double points
Idk my mind is blown over this and I guess I just need to remember that my knitting is a modern craft that is only in some ways related to historical knitting
Happiness Will Come To You.
Is the fur on some bugs (like bees or caterpillars or moths) an example of convergent evolution with mammals or is the fur on those bugs not fur but something else?
I suppose any fibrous body coating like bird feathers, mammalian fur, or arthropod setae used for protection/insulation/sensation etc could be considered convergence on a functional level, but insect “hair” is an entirely different material!
arthropod setae are made of chitin (a polysaccharide), while your hair is made of keratin (a protein). setae can have many different forms, such as stiff bristles, sensory hairs, or the scales on butterflies, moths, and other arthropods. here is a good resource if you’d like to read about the various types of setae and their functions: