Train to Busan and other movies

I saw the Korean zombie movie Train to Busan last night – SO good! This movie has been breaking records since it opened three weeks ago, and I can understand why – it’s unpretentious genre excitement, but exceptionally well done. At least twice as exciting as any American genre film I’ve seen this year.

Train to Busan isn’t very gory, as zombie films go – but there’s a lot of violence and death, as you’d expect. Mainly, there’s a lot of grip-the-armrest tension. Once the movie gets going, the pacing and tension are almost relentless.

I liked that the typical action movie hero – the big, strong guy, great in combat, effortlessly brave, and always does the right thing – is a secondary character in this movie. The main character, in contrast, is kind of a jerk, and certainly not as capable. But he does want to do right by his 7 year old daughter.

Not the right movie if you’re looking for a story of tough women characters kicking ass, alas – there are several female characters who get real screen time and character development, but their main purpose in the plot is to require rescue. The actress who played the main character’s daughter was really good.

If you’re in Portland, Train to Busan is playing tonight and tomorrow at Century Eastport, and as far as I can tell, that’s your only chance to see it in Portland. See it if you can. And buy tickets in advance – both evening shows last night sold out.

Other new-ish movies I’ve recently seen (I made a new years resolution to see more movies this year):

The Fits was wonderful, slow-paced and thoughtful and ambiguous, with an amazing performance by Royalty Hightower as the eleven-year-old protagonist. By far the most original and ambitious film I’ve seen lately, this isn’t one that made me leave the theater feeling full of joy and energy, but I kept returning to it in my thoughts after I’d seen it.

The Secret Life of Pets was exactly what I expected from the trailer – some city housepets go on an adventure, a certain amount of learning and growing takes place, everything is heteronormative, and it all ends happily. But it was a funnier and more entertaining version of exactly what I was expecting than I was expecting, so that was a nice surprise. Not as great as Zootopia, but definitely better than the average high-budget animated fare.

Ghostbusters was fluffy fun, but not memorable. I enjoyed it – and my nieces, who I saw it with, were thrilled. They made really obvious missteps with Leslie Jones’ character. On the other hand, those who say that this is one of the worse films ever, or a radical man-hating screed, are clearly coming from an alternate reality. (Maybe one in which “Batman Vs Superman” was good.)

Star Trek: Beyond was the Platonic ideal of mediocre. There were bits I enjoyed, but damn if I can even remember what they were a week later. Just a really bland action movie with Star Trek trappings. Still better than the previous two Star Trek movies. (Which brings up the question, why do I keep seeing these?)

I also saw, on video, Tiptoes and Batman V Superman, both of which were trainwrecks.

Peter Dinklege and Patricia Arquette in Tiptoes were lots of fun together – Dinklege seems to be able to make any material fun to watch. He should have been the lead actor. Instead, they cast Gary Oldman as a drawf, which would be weird in any case, but especially in a movie which wants so much to be all “yay little people rights!” And wow, wow, wow, was that trailer bad. Anyone who can hear “when the going gets tough, what matters is the size of your heart” and not cringe is made of sterner material than I.

There’s nothing further to be said the grim, tedious mess that was Batman v Superman. I’m still holding onto hope that the Wonder Woman spin-off movie will be fun, though.

Oh, and I saw the German heist thriller Victoria, which wasn’t deep but was extremely fun. The all-shot-in-one-long-take gimmic definitely added to the enjoyment, and the way they timed it – so that the end of the movie took place at dawn – was really neat.

So what have you all seen lately? Anything good? What are you looking forward to?

Posted in Popular (and unpopular) culture | 8 Comments

Open Thread and Link Farm, Groomed by Gorilla Edition

  1. Critics See Efforts by Counties and Towns to Purge Minority Voters From Rolls – The New York Times
    The logic of the Supreme Court’s Shelby County decision was that we no longer needed the preclearance mandate in this day and age. But Republicans have been proving the Supreme Court wrong all over the country by trying to keep minority voters from voting. They haven’t changed at all since the 1960s. (Indirect link.)
  2. Everyday Feminism Is Bad At Feminist Theory Again | Thing of Things
    “But this article adopts entirely the wrong approach. I want men to become less sexist because I think it will help other people, yes. But I also want them to become less sexist because I think it will help them.”
  3. Hillary, Bernie, and the DNC: Dirty tricks?
    Cathy Young examines the arguments that Hillary stole the election from Bernie, and finds them underwhelming.
  4. Wild Gorillas Groom U.S. Tourist in Uganda
    “Local rangers were also stumped, telling King that, while baby gorillas sometimes interact with humans, the rangers had never known adult animals to take such an interest.”
  5. Pirate Printers: Shirts and Totes Printed Directly on Urban Utility Covers
  6. Hitting people is not “soft”: Reporting and police tactics « Now Face North
  7. To Diet Or Not Diet: Science Weighs In
    I’d heard of this study before, but I didn’t know about Judith Stern’s role in it before. Reassuring if true.
  8. The Sitcom Trope About Fat People That’s Way More F*cked Up Than You Might Think — Everyday Feminism
    The trope in question is having a former fat character played by a thin person (the most famous example being Monica from Friends). I thought the author’s point about how this reinforces a “your life begins after you get thin” thought process was very interesting.
  9. The strange case of Marina Joyce and internet hysteria | Technology | The Guardian
    A popular Youtube makeup blogger’s fans decided that she was being held hostage and forced to make videos selling dresses.
  10. Humpback whales around the globe are mysteriously rescuing animals from orcas | MNN – Mother Nature Network
    A much more scientific discussion of this here.
  11. The Secret To KFC’s “Eleven Secret Herbs and Spices” Is That There Are Only Four Not-So-Secret Ingredients | JONATHAN TURLEY
  12. Sargon of Akkad launches petition to save free speech by censoring SJW professors :: We Hunted The Mammoth
    Over 80,000 people signed the petition, which says something about how strong anti-free-speech sentiment among anti-SJWs can be. Admittedly, this petition is too inept to be dangerous.
  13. Trump’s Indecent Proposal — Crooked Timber
    What can McCarthy and “have you no sense of decency” tell us about Trump and this moment?
  14. What Happens if Trump Drops Out?
  15. Report: GOP Strategists Hoping to Distance Trump From Downticket
  16. Texas to execute man for sitting in a truck while his friend unexpectedly murdered someone in a store.
    Also, yet more evidence that the death penalty has no deterrent effect.
  17. Social justice, shipping, and ideology: when fandom becomes a crusade, things get ugly – Vox
  18. Obamacare Appears to Be Making People Healthier – The New York Times
    Interesting study treating Texas’ refusal to expand Medicaid as a “natural experiment.” (Indirect link).
  19. Mercy in the Age of Mandatory Minimums | Cato Institute
  20. Mercedes-Benz Reportedly Working On Line Of Electric Vehicles To Take On Tesla – Consumerist
  21. Minnesota Carpet Cleaning Business Sues US Olympic Committee Over Its Ridiculous Social Media Rules | Techdirt
  22. “I wasn’t expecting to burst into tears:” the surprisingly emotional experience of Clinton’s nomination – Vox
  23. Your kid is way more likely to be poisoned by crayons than by marijuana – The Washington Post
  24. Language Policing: Intersectionality | Thing of Things
  25. Only 20 Percent Of Voters Are ‘Real Americans‘ | FiveThirtyEight
  26. Innovation and Its Enemies
    “People almost never reject technological progress out of sheer ignorance. Rather, they fight to protect their own interests and livelihoods, whether that be operating a dairy farm or running a government.”
  27. Study: Top Bank Execs Saw the Crisis Coming and Sold Their Company’s Shares | naked capitalism
  28. Senator Tim Scott’s Speech on Race and Policing – The Atlantic
  29. Box Turtle Bulletin » Today In History: 1962: New York’s WBAI Radio Broadcasts Talk Show Featuring Eight Gay Men
  30. Consent and Altsex Cultures | Thing of Things
  31. Climate scientists are under attack from frivolous lawsuits | Lauren Kurtz | Environment | The Guardian
  32. End Needless Interactions With Police Officers During Traffic Stops – The Atlantic
  33. Giving up on the “American Dream”? – Open City
    Interesting article featuring brief interviews with Asian immigrant street merchants.
  34. Future of Film I: Why Summer 2013 was Destined for Losses – Liam Boluk | Ivey Business Review
    This longform 2014 article, about the economics behind the increasing dominance of ultra-expensive “tentpole” films in movie offerings (even though many of them are expensive flops), is really interesting and still applicable.
  35. Ethics Hero: Angela Martin, As St. Paul Strangers Prevent A Suicide | Ethics Alarms
  36. Is Watching Gymnastics Worse Than being an NFL Fan?
    Includes some stunning photographs of elite female gymnasts by Andres Kudacki, including the photo of Madison Kocian seen below.
  37. At the 2016 Rio Olympics, What to Make of the Bedazzled Femininity and Ferocious Athleticism That Defines Women’s Gymnastics? – The Atlantic
Madison Kocian competes on the balance beamr during the U.S. women's gymnastics championships, Friday, June 24, 2016, in St. Louis. (Photo/Andres Kudacki)

Madison Kocian competes on the balance beamr during the U.S. women’s gymnastics championships, Friday, June 24, 2016, in St. Louis. (Photo/Andres Kudacki)

bill-posters-is-innocent

Posted in Link farms | 11 Comments

“What About The Lady Macbeth Comparison?”: Decades of sexist questions asked of Hillary Clinton

You could argue about if this or that individual question would be asked of a male candidate; but the overall pattern is clear.

Posted in Elections and politics, Feminism, sexism, etc, Government | Comments Off on “What About The Lady Macbeth Comparison?”: Decades of sexist questions asked of Hillary Clinton

Cartoon: The Wage Gap and How Much Women Work

wage-gap-work-more-1200

This cartoon is by Barry Deutsch and Becky Hawkins.

There was some interesting discussion of this cartoon on Tumblr, regarding if this cartoon stereotypes husbands.

Remember, if you like my political cartoons, please consider supporting my patreon!

Transcript of the cartoon:

Panel 1
In the foreground, a middle-aged man types on his laptop. Behind him, a yelling child is calling to the man, while the child’s mother, holding an infant, shushes him. A caption shows us what the man is typing.
JUNIOR: Dad! Dad! DAD!
MOTHER: Junior, let your father work.
CAPTION: “The ‘wage gap’…”

Panel 2
Same scene. The boy has calmed down, and the mother is bringing him along by the shoulder as she exits. The mother looks exhausted, and the baby is pulling on her hair.
MOTHER: I’m going out – I have to meet with Junior’s teacher and do groceries and pick up your dry cleaning and…
CAPTION: “…mostly disappears….”

Panel 3
The mom has departed, but the man, still typing, turns his head to call out after her.
MAN: Oh, the nursing home left a message about my mother… Would you take care of that?
CAPTION: “…when you control for the fact…”

Panel 4
The man turns back to typing.
MAN (thought balloon): Hope she makes stew for dinner tonight.
CAPTION: “…that women work far fewer hours than men.”

Posted in Cartooning & comics, Feminism, sexism, etc, Gender and the Economy | 25 Comments

On being fat and liking creators who have done anti-fat material

making-of-fat-bastard

I love some of Tina Fey’s work. But she tells fat jokes, including a sketch where she appeared in a fat suit.

I love The Simpsons, but soooo many fat jokes.

By far my favorite MCU work is Jessica Jones, which had a nasty fat joke in the first episode.

I love some of the Austin Powers movies, but the fat jokes (and the fat suit) – ugh. The worst of the worst.

Bill Murray apparently makes more fat jokes on screen than any other actor, but I will love Groundhog Day until I die and then i hope they bury me with a video player playing Groundhog Day on infinite loop.

I love Evan Dorkin’s “Eltingville Club” – it’s brilliant cartooning, and a great satire of the darkest side of fandom – but it’s a trashfire of cruel fat jokes, and in the early installments, at least, it doesn’t read like Dorkin sees a problem with that.

In the TV show Maya and Marty, Martin Short wears a fat suit for a sketch full of “fat people are gross” jokes at least once per episode. That won’t stop a liberal site like Vox from loving it – they won’t even find that worth noting.

I love love love the show Grace and Frankie, created by Marta Kaufman, who also created the fat-joke-filled sitcom Friends. (To tell you the truth, I like Friends, too, although it did so much so wrong.)

I’m a big Joss Whedon fan, especially of Buffy. Hey, remember this travesty of a fat suit from Buffy? It’s nearly the only time any fat character has appeared in a Whedon production.

I could go on, and on, and on, and on. Honestly, comedy is so saturated with anti-fat ideology that you can pretty much safely assume that everyone in comedy has done it. And entertainment as a whole is only a little better.

So do I think we should all stop watching works by these creators and more? No.

I’m not willing to harm myself by refusing to watch entertainment by people who have made or participated in anti-fat jokes. If other people want to cut these folks and a zillion others out of their entertainment menu, that’s fine, but I’m not going to do that. Nor do I think others should do it; nor do I think that thin people are bad allies if they enjoy works by creators who have made anti-fat jokes.

I don’t think Tina Fey and Joss Whedon and all these other folks are bad people. Or that they hate fat people. I think they come from a society in which anti-fat beliefs are the norm, and that’s reflected in their work.

I’m all for criticizing the anti-fat ideology in their work. But I’m not going to call them bad as people, and I’m not going to call anyone else bad as people for enjoying their work, and I’m not going to call myself a bad person for enjoying their work.

Posted in Fat, fat and more fat, Popular (and unpopular) culture | 8 Comments

Open Thread and Link Farm, Empty Chairs At Empty Theaters Edition

  1. In praise of ambivalence—“young” feminism, gender identity, and free speech | Practical Ethics
    A post criticizing how leftists have responded to Alice Dreger and Germaine Greer. There’s some back-and-forth between me and the author in the comments.
  2. A discussion of the phrase “Not All Men,” again with me participating in the comments.
  3. A Feminist Defense of Cinderella
  4. Harrassment, Racism, & “Harmless Torturers”
    Also really interesting to think about in light of “what does it matter if I vote?” arguments.
  5. Trope Anatomy 101: Your Body Is Not Your Confession | The Book Smugglers
    Really good essay on how fat people are presented in media.
  6. The 2016 Hugo Awards: Two Weeks Out
    If the price tag isn’t too high and you’re interested in the Hugos, please don’t sit this year out. It’s okay if you haven’t read everything.
  7. Beyond Panic and Punishment: Brock Turner and the Left Response to Sexual Violence | Common Dreams
    Argues that calls for harsher jail sentences aren’t where the left should go.
  8. Ghostbusters Enjoys $46m Opening Weekend Entirely On Strength Of Guys From The Internet Sitting Alone In Empty Theaters With Their Phone Cameras
    Overall, it seems that Ghostbusters is neither a huge hit, nor a huge flop. Which is fine with me. I’m bugged by so many people being so eager to see this film flop, though.
  9. Zero Tolerance: Censored by the Left | Alice Domurat Dreger
    By “censorship,” Dreger means that a website declined to publish her article. Because that’s totally what censorship means. It’s not as if “Everyday Feminism” has a free speech right to choose what and what not to publish.
  10. Worthwhile Canadian Initiative: What’s wrong with Airbnb?
    ” Overall, it’s really hard to say whether the net impact of Airbnb is to reduce overall income and wealth inequality or increase it. To the extent that Airbnb diminishes the Hilton family fortune, while making it cheaper for tourists from Tulsa to visit New York city, it may actually reduce inequality in income and wealth.”
  11. Meet Dani Mathers: The Playboy Playmate From Hell – The Daily Beast
    She took a photo of an unwitting nude woman in the locker room and made fun of the woman’s body on snapchat.
  12. Sexual Harassment Is Invisible to Half the Population – Bloomberg View
    “If you rarely or never see sexual harassment, then it can be hard to believe a group that says that it’s really common and that legal redress is required.”
  13. Box Turtle Bulletin » Today In History: 1962: New York’s WBAI Radio Broadcasts Talk Show Featuring Eight Gay Men
  14. Firing Roger Ailes and exiling Milo Yiannopoulos isn’t going to fix much of anything — Quartz
  15. Matte Shot – a tribute to Golden Era special fx: THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF DISNEY MATTE ART: Part Two
    The matte paintings used to create the city in Mary Poppins are especially beautiful.
  16. Ash’s Regency | Gerhard Art
    Cerebus background artist Gerhard’s stunning new drawing of the Regency Hotel’s back side.
  17. Urban Myth: Black Lives Matter Protests Kill Girl Waiting for Transplant in Memphis
    Snopes is on the case.
  18. Same-sex couple denied a birthday cake by local bakery
    I think the bakery owner honestly wants the drama. I AM MAKING A STAND!!!!!
  19. Anatomy of An Iconic Image: How this photograph of a protester in Baton Rouge could come to symbolize a movement – Salon.com
  20. Police, Prosecutors and Judges Rely on a Flawed $2 Drug Test That Puts Innocent People Behind Bars – ProPublica
  21. Spideyzine,” a 20-page Spiderman fan comic, is one of the best Spiderman comics I’ve ever read, and you can download it for free.
  22. Gamasutra – Opinion: Being sexy and not sexist – a look at Bayonetta and objectification
    Although this is about a character in a game, the discussion is applicable to fictional characters in general.
  23. Help Support a Harassment Victim | SINMANTYX
    Years ago, Chanty Binx was caught on camera yelling at MRAs. Years later, they are still harassing her. She’s crowdfunding to hire a lawyer.
  24. Why the new ‘Ghostbusters’ is Gamergate’s worst nightmare | The Daily Dot
  25. Google deletes artist’s blog, along with a decade of his work | Fusion
    Yes, it was foolish of him not to back up, but still.
  26. The case of the $629 Band-Aid — and what it reveals about American health care – Vox
  27. US Rep. Steve King preaches literal white supremacy on national television – Vox
  28. Who is this man who seems to die in every terrorist attack?
    The answer: He’s alive, not a victim of a terrorist attack, but several people he knows are engaging in an oddball revenge scheme.
  29. FBI: No Evidence That Orlando Shooter Was Gay : snopes.com
  30. Whole Health Source: Two huge new studies further undermine the “obesity paradox”
    I don’t think these studies are the be-all and end-all, but they’re interesting, and worth linking to because they contradict some of what I’ve argued in the past.
  31. In Memoriam: The VCR, 1956 – 2016 | ThinkProgress
  32. Distributors of Anti-Vax Film Are Trying to Keep an Autistic Rights Advocate From Criticizing It
  33. Woman Cosplays To Work To Beat Stupid Dress Code
  34. In 1995, Wal-Mart Got in Trouble for Pulling a T-Shirt Promising ‘Someday a Woman Will be PRESIDENT!’
  35. 6 Ways I Was Taught to Be a Good Fatty (And Why I Stopped) — Everyday Feminism

Posted in Link farms | 52 Comments

RIP Jack Davis, December 2, 1924 – July 27, 2016

Jack Davis was one of the all-time great American cartoonists, and one of the best renderers ever to work for MAD. Here are some panels he drew in the earliest issues of MAD.

Posted in Cartooning & comics, Comics I Like | Comments Off on RIP Jack Davis, December 2, 1924 – July 27, 2016

Cartoon: Where Am I Supposed To Pee?

where-to-pee-teaser-image

My new cartoon, co-written with our own Grace, is now up at Everyday Feminism! Please check it out.

(If you enjoy cartoons like this, you can help me make them by supporting my Patreon.)

Posted in Cartooning & comics, Transsexual and Transgender related issues | 4 Comments

I’m Asking You For A Peer-Reviewed Study Showing That A Typical Fat Person Can Become Sustainably Non-Fat Through Deliberate Weight-Loss

Fernando-Botero-Painting

Hi!

If you’ve been directed to this post, it’s probably because we’re discussing if there’s any practical, sustainable, healthy way for a typical fat person to choose to no longer be fat. As part of this discussion, I’ve asked you to refer me to peer-reviewed studies demonstrating that a typical fat person can become sustainably non-fat through deliberate effort (whether you call that a “diet” or a “lifestyle change”). Since so many people believe this to be indisputable fact, I don’t think it’s out of line of me to ask for good-quality evidence.

Let me explain what I’m not looking for. These are things that are not evidence that becoming and remaining non-fat is reasonably possible for a typical fat person.

NO ANECDOTES PLEASE

I’m not looking for anecdotes. I’m looking for peer-reviewed studies.

Obviously, thousands of fat people have become non-fat, perhaps including yourself. And that’s fine. I sincerely wish that all of those ex-fat-people find sustained happiness and health.

However, since millions of people diet and fail to become non-fat, that there are many such anecdotes of weight-loss doesn’t actually tell us anything about what would happen for a typical fat person. Your own personal experience (or that of people you know, or people you know of) may not be generally applicable.

SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF WEIGHT LOST

To count as evidence, a study would need to demonstrate that a majority of fat subjects were able to become so-called “normal” weight ((“Normal” weight, in most studies, refers to people with BMIs of between 18.5 and 24.9. I have issues with BMI, but for the narrow purposes of this post, I’ll accept that standard.)) – that is, they’re no longer fat – through intentional weight-loss.

Most studies about weight loss have extremely forgiving standards of “success.” A study demonstrating that most fat subjects were able to lose 6 pounds or thereabouts isn’t what I’m looking for. Fat people are still fat even if we lost two to ten pounds. A study demonstrating that fat people can lose a few pounds doesn’t establish anything at all about if a typical fat person can become non-fat. ((If you want to argue that losing those few pounds is nonetheless worthwhile, that’s fine; but that still doesn’t demonstrate that it’s possible for most fat people to stop being fat.))

See, for example, this study, which declares “research has shown that 20% of overweight individuals are successful at long-term weight loss when defined as losing at least 10% of initial body weight and maintaining the loss for at least 1 y. ” Well, I weigh 330 pounds. If I lost 10% of my weight, that would make me 297 pounds – which is to say, I’d still be fat.  (Also, a 20% success rate is not very impressive.)

WEIGHT LOSS WHICH LASTED AT LEAST FIVE YEARS

Another problem with that study I just quoted? “For at least 1 year” isn’t a very impressive claim, if we’re looking for evidence of sustained weight loss. I’m asking you for studies showing weight loss that’s maintained for at least five years, and a ten-year follow-up would be better.

This is important, because almost any weight-loss plan works for a few months or a year – which is the length of follow-up many, if not most, weight loss trials use. For the purpose of asking if sustainable weight loss is possible, it’s not meaningful unless the study can show the loss is sustained over the long term.

MOST PARTICIPANTS DIDN’T DROP OUT

I’ve seen a lot of studies claiming to show a successful weight-loss program – but when I look at the details, 75% of the study’s subjects dropped out before the study was complete. This is a problem because the people who drop out of a weight loss program are not a random selection – they are more likely to be the people who found the program wasn’t doing anything for them.

NOT A STUDY OF ONLY SUCCESSFUL DIETERS

Suppose I did a study of professional basketball players. My study shows that a typical NBA player exercises a lot and practices at basketball a lot. Therefore, I say, a typical person can become an NBA player by exercising a lot and practicing basketball a lot. That would be self-evidently ridiculous. The people who can successfully become NBA players are outliers; we can’t assume that a typical person who follows Lebron James’ ((I know the name of a basketball player!)) exercise and practice routine would experience James’ success.

Yet very often, when I ask for evidence that a typical fat person can stop being fat, people cite studies using data from The National Weight Control Registry. The NWCR “is a research study that includes people (18 years or older) who have lost at least 13.6 kg (30 lbs) of weight and kept it off for at least one year… On average, registry members have lost about 70 pounds and kept it off for five and a half years when joining the registry.”

In other words, to be part of the NWCR’s data, you have to already be an outlier. Just as NBA players are outliers, the NWCR participants are outliers. A study of self-selected outliers can’t tell us anything about whether a typical fat person is able to stop being fat.

PLEASE DON’T TELL ME ABOUT THERMODYNAMICS

That’s not a study, and not what I asked for.

Look at it this way – suppose I had asked you for an example of a spaceship that can successfully take living human beings to Venus and back. You might have many reasons, rooted in an understanding of physics, to believe that such a spaceship is definitely possible. But that’s not the same as demonstrating that such a ship has actually been built and successfully operated.

I’m not asking you for what’s possible in principle. I’m asking for documentation that there is a weight-loss approach that has been tried in the real world, and has been shown to successfully cause most fat people to stop being fat people, in a sustainable fashion.

Thanks for reading! Now that you’ve read all this – and thanks, sincerely, for your patience – I look forward to seeing your evidence.

Related reading:

  1. Weight Science: Evaluating the Evidence for a Paradigm Shift | Nutrition Journal | Full Text
  2. Medicare’s Search for Effective Obesity Treatments: Diets Are Not the Answer [eScholarship]
  3. Miller, W. C. How effective are traditional dietary and exercise interventions for weight loss? Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 31, 1129-1134
  4. The science is in: exercise won’t help you lose much weight – Vox
  5. Diets do not work: The thin evidence that losing weight makes you healthier.
  6. Odds of a severely obese woman becoming “normal” weight: 1 in 677. For men, 1 in 1290. | Alas, a Blog
  7. Why the “war on fat” is a scam to peddle drugs – Salon.com
  8. The Case Against Weight-Loss Dieting | Alas, a Blog
  9. Do 95% of Dieters Really Fail? | Dances With Fat
  10. Seriously, Weight Loss Doesn’t Work | Dances With Fat
  11. Why Don’t You Like My Studies? | Dances With Fat
  12. Why Do Dieters Gain Their Weight Back? | Dances With Fat
  13. National Weight Control Registry – Skydiving Without a Chute | Dances With Fat
  14. The Fat Trap – The New York Times
  15. All diets work the same: poorly | Shapely Prose
  16. Calories In/Calories Out? Science Says No | Dances With Fat
  17. Why You Can’t Lose Weight on a Diet – The New York Times
  18. Diets Don't Work, So Why Do We Still Pretend They Do?

Top image: painting by Fernando Botero.

Posted in Fat, fat and more fat | 54 Comments

Friday Read! “Remembrance Is Something Like a House” by Will Ludwigsen

Remembrance Is Something Like a House” by Will Ludwigsen:

Cheniere_Caminada,_Louisiana_Ruined_House

Every day for three decades, the abandoned house strains against its galling anchors, hoping to pull free. It has waited thirty years for its pipes and pilings to finally decay so it can leave for Florida to find the Macek family.

Nobody in its Milford neighborhood will likely miss the house or even notice its absence; it has hidden for decades behind overgrown bushes, weeds, and legends. When they talk about the house at all, the neighbors whisper about the child killer who lived there long ago with his family: a wife and five children who never knew their father kept his rotting playmate in the crawlspace until the police came.

The house, however, knows the truth and wants to confess it, even if it has to crawl eight hundred miles.

Read here, or find an audio version here.

Posted in Recommended Reading | Comments Off on Friday Read! “Remembrance Is Something Like a House” by Will Ludwigsen