I think we have a total opposite opinion of what @338canada.bsky.social wrote a few days later.
cc @joanneboucher.bsky.social
Posts by MinoCae
The vulture journalism on that other platform is finally being punished.
The "aggregators" will earn less money from the content they stole from other accounts.
www.theguardian.com/technology/2...
Is there a way to block posts that contain Truth Social screenshots?
oil prices are about to make polyester a noble fiber
If I had known Chuck Norris was so politically bad, I would have mindfully not watched his movies instead of just never seeing them.
Now we’re talking real issues…😂
Look, I may have disagreed with Chuck Norris‘s politics, but that doesn’t mean I can’t also acknowledge he was an untalented actor who made shitty movies. RIP
A present from Greenland and Canada ❄️
"Celebrar la puertorriqueñidad es un desafío al colonizador, sí. Pero hacerlo en la tarima más importante de Estados Unidos, en la televisión nacional y en las narices del presidente que una vez se planteó vender Puerto Rico, es un acto de amor propio"
😅
Musste sehr lachen bei diesem Instagram-Fund, Link unten
Literally a publication for eight-year olds 40 years ago
FT: Economics 2025 Nobel Prize Philippe Aghion is son of Gaby Aghion, who found the fashion house Cholé and had its chief designer, Karl Lagerfeld, helping Philippe with German homework. Aghion spent holidays with Paul Éluard and Tristan Tzara when he was a child — his father was a gallerist.
Ruth Rendell’s “A Judgement in Stone”
“Eunice Parchman killed the Coverdale family because she could not read or write.”
“Eunice Parchman killed the Coverdale family because she could not read or write.”
This is the first line of Ruth Rendell’s “A Judgement in Stone.”
#booksky
"This was the scene, unpeopled, dim and silent, that I had been dreaming of for months, often on two or three consecutive nights, always the same dream, the same tableau, more or less, more than less. What did it mean, what did it signify?"
“No one falls so swiftly and so helplessly as the one who imagines himself invulnerable.”
John Banville, ‘Venetian Vespers’
#booksky
And the Christmas music too.
Finally, a sunny day in Montréal after nearly a month of damp, cold weather, early darkness, and endlessly cloudy skies.
Ok I'd like a dislike button, would you?
@bsky.app announced a new milestone of 40 million users, will soon start testing “dislikes” as a way to improve personalization on its main Discover feed and others
techcrunch.com/2025/10/31/b...
Just found out there's a "Scream 7".
I stopped at 3.
Podcasts are now illegal in China
The richest man on earth owns X.
The second richest man on earth is about to acquire TikTok and his family could soon own both Paramount and Warner Bros.
The third richest man owns Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp.
The fourth richest man owns The Washington Post.
See the problem here?
Inspector Clouseau (Peter Sellers), from "Pink Panther" movies.
Who's solving the Louvre robbery?
Financial Times: the ex-president of Madagascar, Andrey Rajoelina, ousted from power this week, in the wave of popularity of the movie "Madagascar" wanted to import zebras, giraffes and elephants to the country to boost tourism.
A skeletal figure floats off the ground, wrapped in a cape made of autumn leaves. It wields a scythe adorned with a harvest of gourds.
Repostin' The Autumnal. Manifesting my seasonal mood.
The Wall Street Journal: US wine exports to Canada dropped 96% in the second quarter of 2025, from nearly $111 million to under $4 million, and the trade surplus has flipped to a deficit for the first time ever.
The new Literature Nobel Prize winner, Hungarian László Krasznahorkai, had one of his books, "Sátántangó", turned into a movie by also Hungarian director Béla Tarr ("The Turin Horse") in a seven-hour long adaptation.
Susan Sontag called the writer "the contemporary master of the apocalypse".
Valentin Vacherot +112 —> #92, career high, with SF in Shanghai from qualifying.
He studied at Texas A&M University like Arthur Rinderknech, Yannick Hanfmann, Yannick Maden and Carlson Branstine.
Wine consumption in 2024 was the lowest since 1961, said the International Wine Association.
The main problem is champagne, that sold -11% after prices were pushed to record highs from major producers in France.
Economic uncertainty and tariffs in 2025 won't help.