December 12, 2025

Pre-weekend links, AI-AI-O

  • Joe Wilkins: McDonald’s Pulls Down AI-Generated Holiday Ad After Deluge of Mockery. The offensive ad is still available for viewing, and I am horrified to report that it is in fact on par with non-AI holiday marketing shlock. Every profession that feels collectively threatened by LLMs has spent decades undermining itself and is now reaping what it sowed, and yes I include many medical specialties here.
  • Sam Kriss for the NYT: Why Does A.I. Write Like … That? A brilliant essay with illustrations that would make me blow a fuse if I were to see them out in the wild. Kriss has a blog to which I am now subscribed and also seems to post on this new social network for writers called… Substack? And Curtis Yarvin plus the rationalist buffoons hate him? Worth following!
  • Christopher Butler: The Last Invention. “The real threat of AI as ‘the last invention’ isn’t that it will actually end human innovation and put us all out to pasture in a withering culture of leisure, but that we’ll believe it will. That we’ll internalize the narrative of our own obsolescence and stop trying. That we’ll mistake the tool for the maker and forget that the heart that yearns past the boundary is what drives everything forward.”
  • Andrew Sharp: Netflix and the Flattening of Everything. I am not a fan of Netflix. In fact, I dread the moment when they gobble up the last thing, idea or person standing on their path to entertainment singularity. And yet I stay subscribed.
  • Taylor Jessen on Mastodon: Candidate for Post of the Year. The post in question is a screenshot from Bluesky which perfectly demonstrates end-stage enshittifaction of what used to be the capital-I Internet, but that is beside the point which is in fact funny and true.

December 11, 2025

Thursday links, for the academics

December 10, 2025

Let the year-in-review season begin. First up is flying, courtesy of Flighty. Here’s hoping for fewer miles travelled in 2026!

A digital passport design displaying a world map with flight paths, travel statistics, and personal information including flight numbers and distances.

December 9, 2025

Tuesday links, with some Q&A

December 8, 2025

📺 It breaks my heart that Season 5 of Only Murders in the Building immediately descended into toilet humor and pointless self-parody. Five episodes in and we are out — life is too short to spend it on drivel.

December 7, 2025

Sunday evening links, from the department of hot takes

So yes, Americans are materially wealthy and unfulfilled, and the primary problem is cultural—we’ve sacrificed community and meaning to emphasize an archetype built on acquiring as much stuff as possible, but then we have made that unnecessarily hard to do. When you give your citizens a cultural script, built on the material, that promises hard work will lead to success, and then your policy design ensures it doesn’t, people will end up both economically frustrated, as well as spiritually empty, sitting in their living room streaming the latest movie wondering what exactly is the point of life. Or, they will feel they have failed at the material, while also having little else to give them meaning.

December 6, 2025

It’s Caturday Night Fever (or lack thereof).

A person is petting a relaxed orange cat lying on their lap in a cozy living room setting.

December 5, 2025

❄️ DC had its first snowfall today, which was so much earlier than usual that it surprised even some public school systems, which only had enough time to declare a 2-hour delay at most. DC Public Schools are operating on their regular schedule, because DC DOT can read the weather forecast and knows how to put salt on roads.

But it really wasn’t that early. We had November snow as recently as 2018 (November 15, 1.4 inches), so December 5 doesn’t even crack the the top 20. The earliest? October 10 1979, 0.3".

Pre-weekend links, smart words from smart people edition

December 4, 2025

Readers from Philadelphia or Philly-adjacent, please help me make sense of the place. From my limited time there, it seems to have fallen into the uncanny valley of American cities: has some history but it’s no Boston, some finance-looking people walking down the streets but it ain’t Manhattan, some tall buildings but not Chicago. Is the best thing about it that it’s a short and pleasant train ride away from both DC and NYC? Surely there’s more, but what is it?