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caesar novus

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Posts posted by caesar novus

  1. Quote

    filed a case with the Egyptian public prosecutor’s office to shut down the Netflix platform in Egypt, following the trailer release of “Queen Cleopatra”, which inaccurately portrays the last <Greek> Queen of Egypt as a sub-Saharan African.

    "the documentary promotes the kind of Afrocentrism which aims at distorting and obliterating Egyptian identity and contradicts the country’s history."

    P.S.: Speaking of televised afrocentrism, the reason U.S. commercials have turned 85% into depictions of afro american life (15% of audience) is ESG. Pensions and other investments have been de-linked from their owners and weaponized for ideology. It used to be that investors would vote for company board members and policies, but this has recently been taken over by institutions who mandate Orwellian Social Good policies. Free markets with their "invisible hand" adapting to consumers are increasingly sabotaged.

  2. One thing I wish somebody introduced me earlier to are "zero-drop" type shoes, as typified by the Xero brand. That refers to no heel elevation, but goes along with a barefoot feel with super thin flat uncushioned soles, super wide toe box, and tight fit lengthwise. Especially the last sounds like heresy, but one of Xero's videos by the founder (which I have misplaced) sold me on their concepts, and I was so pleased with an example that I stockpiled more for every need.

    Somehow they make your feet feel really alive without being entombed by cushions or without the rawness of being conventionally near barefoot. The soles seem to be a resilient superball-like material that supposedly stands up to umpteen marathons.

    Actual Xero's are typically breathtakingly expensive, and shipping can range to $75 to refused altogether, so I have experimented with knockoffs under the Amazon Whitin brand and others which are hit and miss. I wonder if affordable new unboxed Xeros occasionally found on ebay were likely shoplifted? Beware that I could yak on for a dozen paragraphs on how these can keep the podiatrist away. Altho they make boots and all, below is an extreme minimalist cut-it-out-yourself kit:

    ClassicKit1.jpg

  3. I think the existing inland Rome to Salerno track goes by the backside of Vesuvius/Pompeii, and continues to Paestum, maybe changing to a local train that stops perhaps a mile stroll from Paestum. So it has always been semi-useable, but eventually will have convenient station/hub and an express schedule. Some of my travel nightmares were taking the alternative coastal train route Naples to Pompeii/Sorrento in rush hours, and mystery bus from Salerno to Paestum.

    So in future you might stay on the morning train when mobs from Rome step off to jam Pompeii museum turnstiles, and ride onward to bucolic Paestum and it's temples among meadows of wildflowers amidst only  scattered schoolkid groups. Train back to Pompeii in early afternoon, when it actually empties of tour groups towards sunset hours which might be as late as 8 or 9pm in summer.

    Quote

    At the end of 2021, Pompeii’s authorities introduced a bus service that links Pompeii to surrounding archeological sites.

    Of course you are spoiled with must-see stuff nearby, like Herculaneum, Isle of Capri, Positano, Pozzuoli, and various villas which are far from the inland train route. Probably it will pause in Naples if you want to see sculptures cherry picked from Pompeii in their museum, or else hydrofoil over to Capri.

  4. While musing about removing those greenhouses sitting over unexcavated parts of Herculaneum, I came across this surprising statement:

    Quote

    Italy is one of the leading countries in protected cultivation on account of its mild climate in winter and the old Italic feeling for greenhouses which appeared first in the ancient Rome.

    Furthermore https://www.actahort.org/books/481/481_96.htm says the focus now is on lucrative off or shoulder season fruits and veggies, so these are concentrated on Italy's mild coastlines and the south (even where summer heat shuts them down). The availability of cheap plastic films made things more affordable than glass. The Roman greenhouses are often misrepresented as using implausable glass roofs to grow off season cucumbers on Capri for Tiberius. But a very interesting source https://journals.ashs.org/hortsci/view/journals/hortsci/57/2/article-p236.xml explains:

    Quote

    The origins of controlled-environment horticulture is the Roman specularia, which were wooden frames covered with transparent stone, a form of gypsum (selenite), known to the Romans as lapis specularia or transparent stone. The specularia was used for out-of-season culture of long-fruited melons, C. melo Flexuosus Group.

    That is a truly fascinating illustrated article (actually, like the other, a book abstract), but I'm not sure why they speculate the greenhouses were near Villa Jovis when Tiberius had 4 other villas on the same island. Jovis is kind of a backbreaking climb, although maybe it pokes up into the sun on foggy days:

     

  5. You're welcome, altho I suspect it was my other topic that was irresistible. Here I was trying to post an outstanding Herculaneum documentary, but I simply cannot find it again among the many good ones. Besides the preserved wood, they showed aerial views of the vast areas not yet dug up. I wondered if they might scrape off some modern buildings given that population of Italy is dropping by a quarter million per year. But it looks like vacant land is being used for greenhouses leveraging their volcanic soil. They grow amazing stuff in that soil, like huge sweet almost non-tart lemons, special tomatoes etc.

  6. This may seem like a random selection from a series of Yale classes on later Rome, but I think it was especially well done.

    00:00 - Chapter 1. Primary Sources: Procopius and Gregory of Tours 02:19 - Chapter 2. The Emperor Justinian 08:42 - Chapter 3. Procopius as a Source on Justinian 16:28 - Chapter 4. Background on Justinian 24:10 - Chapter 5. The Circus, the Blues and the Greens, and the Nika Riots 30:20 - Chapter 6. Justinian's Wars 38:11 - Chapter 7. Justinian's Law Code, the Corpus Iuris Civilis

     

     

  7. Visit the amazing egypt channel https://www.youtube.com/@HistoryforGRANITE that digs the dirt on what is being overlooked or wrongly spun in the incestuous scholarly world of egypt archeology. It doesn't intend to mud sling, but does recognize dysfunctional behind the scenes stuff that I strongly suspected was there. For instance there is wholesale coverup of carbon 14 dating because it all upsets selfish narratives (see video below). Furthermore it reveals prominent phonies and their contradictory announcements - mainly the most famous useful idiot in the whole industry, and a constant darling of US PBS documentaries. I rejoiced (here I think) when he was imprisoned in the arab spring but now he and several others are back in the spotlight blocking productive inquiry.

     

  8. I see various good quality videos that don't seem to justify their own topic or fit existing ones and may just have a loose connection to ancient Rome. Felt wrong to not post them, so here is a misc assortment topic for them. Hopefully you have already been subscribed to these folks though.

    I always felt bad about a quirky thing causing me to skip seeing the Vettii villa just before it closing for umpteen years of restoral. Now I can feel more at peace since I see I hate Roman painting aesthetic right to the core: lurid and cluttered. Same applies even to Nero's house where I just missed seeing it's opening; it's more tasteful colors don't redeem the childish scrawl. Architecture and sculpture is where ancient Rome excels for me.

     

    The above aerial tour of Rome should not be seen as focused on the ugly typewriter monument, but views FROM it. I was too cheap to pay for entrance when it first opened, and now see it to be like the only skyscraper in Paris; when you are on top of it you see everything except the eyesore itself. This Roman site tour guy is doing more and more with drones and artful music. Of many roof gardens, one that goes by too fast is over the top. It may start up in lower res, but can run in 4k. Would make a nice loop to play continuously on an idle TV?

  9. 23 hours ago, guy said:

    Winwood stole the show, however. Winwood's solo "Low Spark of High Heeled Boys" was absolutely breathtaking. A few years later, I saw Winwood with Steely Dan. I was less impressed as he became more "jazzy" for that show.

    I can only recall attending 3 shows by major reputation groups. Uninspiring in uninspiring venues; not as rewarding as hungrier no-names. One legendary singer had about that time married a friend of my closest relative. To bad we petulantly weren't talking at the time; maybe I would have visited backstage.

    Clapton shed amusing light on what it's like to watch classic video clips such as these. Don't show my kids he said, due to the facial twitches and other signs of drug use. Also can be embarrassing due to many projects being under rehearsed and with more work could and did bring endless standing ovations.

    Very ageing rockstars are scaring me about mortality; I am more into youtube audiobooks now.

  10. Listening to royalty free background music now, to accompany outdoor activities on my youtube channel. When they contain much wind noise, the peanut gallery tunes out instead of just lowering the volume and then the youtube algorithm gives it the kiss of dis-recommendation. So here are some either soft ones to replace the audio or lively ones to blend; I guess I get what I pay for...

    fragments

    verge

    boogaloo

    70's summer

    fun retro motown

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