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  1. "Somen Police" Established, Man Arrested for Topping Noodles with Coriander

    To maintain order at summer dining tables, the government has established the "Special Noodle Culture Protection Squad," commonly known as the "Somen Police." On their first day of operations, a man who used tapioca pearls and coriander as condiments was arrested for violating the Cultural Protection Act.

    alt.andpaper.net/en/articles/2

    #government #overregulation

  2. Tyrannosaurus Rex Was Actually a Giant Shimeji Mushroom. Possibility Emerges That Oyakodon on Dining Tables Was 'Real Parent and Child'

    A major streaming service documentary overturns established theory. The Cretaceous king Tyrannosaurus did not go extinct but evolved into "giant Shimeji mushrooms" by dispersing spores.

    alt.andpaper.net/en/articles/2

    #Tyrannosaurus #giant Shimeji #documentary #paleontology #cooking #oyakodon

  3. Stage Play 'Spaceship Chawanmushi': Actors Become Ingredients Themselves, Audience in Standing Ovation as They Sink in Zero Gravity

    A revolution in theater. The new stage production depicts making chawanmushi aboard a spaceship, but the climax features all actors dressed as shrimp and ginkgo nuts, slowly sinking inside a giant bowl.

    alt.andpaper.net/en/articles/2

    #chawanmushi #space #theater #realism #immersive-theater #avant-garde #surreal

  4. AI Earplugs Auto-Mute Only Boss's Voice: Will Work Reform Smile at "Unhearable Instructions"?

    The newly released AI earplugs analyze surrounding sounds and eliminate only the "boss's voice," ranked #1 in users' stress sources. While the Labor Standards Office praises it as innovative, bosses are perplexed, saying "overtime instructions have become ASMR."

    alt.andpaper.net/en/articles/2

    #ear #AI #earplugs #boss #workplace #ASMR #stress #noise-canceling

  5. Sofa Gap Recognized as Independent Nation, Dropped Coins Now Foreign Currency

    The "Sofa Gap Territory," expanded by endless remote work sitting, has received UN sovereignty recognition. Resident registration is possible with missing receipts, but the dust storms during exit inspections are reportedly the greatest challenge.

    alt.andpaper.net/en/articles/2

    #gap #sofa #coins #nation #receipt #parody #remote work

  6. Silent Fart Yoga Studio Maintains Sacred Quiet

    A new yoga class with the motto 'Release the scent, not the sound' has emerged. Participants harmonize body and mind through silent flatulence, while ventilation-duty instructors demonstrate poses wearing gas masks.

    alt.andpaper.net/en/articles/2

    #fart #yoga #studio #mindfulness #odor #breathing #silent #air purifier

  7. De #homeWizard batterij is al bijna weer opgeladen voor alweer een energie positieve dag en avond. De eerste week met de batterij heeft 13,5kWh achter de meter gehouden. Maar je ziet ook wel hoe inefficiënt een accu eigenlijk is, want daarvoor heeft de batterij zo'n 17kWh geladen...
    Toch als de zon tot laat in de middag schijnt (en we een stukje kookplaat gebruik op accu én PV kunnen doen) dan redden we het met de accu tot de volgende ochtend. De avondpiek (17-21u) dekt ie sowieso.

  8. New issue 339! Explore immunity & cancer, optional corequisite for A&P, the science of racism, COVID smell loss solutions, Ozempic's health perks, a fresh take on obesity, neuroanatomy teaching, and more! 🌟🔬
    👉 aandp.info/sci-339
    #neuroanatomy #BMI #obesity #cancer

  9. New issue 339! Explore immunity & cancer, optional corequisite for A&P, the science of racism, COVID smell loss solutions, Ozempic's health perks, a fresh take on obesity, neuroanatomy teaching, and more! 🌟🔬
    👉 aandp.info/sci-339
    #neuroanatomy #BMI #obesity #cancer

  10. New issue 339! Explore immunity & cancer, optional corequisite for A&P, the science of racism, COVID smell loss solutions, Ozempic's health perks, a fresh take on obesity, neuroanatomy teaching, and more! 🌟🔬
    👉 aandp.info/sci-339
    #neuroanatomy #BMI #obesity #cancer

  11. New issue 339! Explore immunity & cancer, optional corequisite for A&P, the science of racism, COVID smell loss solutions, Ozempic's health perks, a fresh take on obesity, neuroanatomy teaching, and more! 🌟🔬
    👉 aandp.info/sci-339
    #neuroanatomy #BMI #obesity #cancer

  12. What is wrong with you? What is wrong with your brain? Why is it so unimaginable to you that another living thing may have different needs than yourself? Why are you so fucking angry at people for taking care of something that isn’t you, or themself?

    I am falling down a rabbit hole here. #reddit #dogs #dogsofmastodon #OneOfThePostsOnHere #IShitYouNot #WasOnePosterBraggingAboutHowTheyShutDownDogloversWith #WELLHITLERLOVEDDOGSTOO #wellguesswhatbuttercup #hitlerdrankwatertoo #andpainted #mastodon

  13. What is wrong with you? What is wrong with your brain? Why is it so unimaginable to you that another living thing may have different needs than yourself? Why are you so fucking angry at people for taking care of something that isn’t you, or themself?

    I am falling down a rabbit hole here. #reddit #dogs #dogsofmastodon #OneOfThePostsOnHere #IShitYouNot #WasOnePosterBraggingAboutHowTheyShutDownDogloversWith #WELLHITLERLOVEDDOGSTOO #wellguesswhatbuttercup #hitlerdrankwatertoo #andpainted #mastodon

  14. What is wrong with you? What is wrong with your brain? Why is it so unimaginable to you that another living thing may have different needs than yourself? Why are you so fucking angry at people for taking care of something that isn’t you, or themself?

    I am falling down a rabbit hole here. #reddit #dogs #dogsofmastodon #OneOfThePostsOnHere #IShitYouNot #WasOnePosterBraggingAboutHowTheyShutDownDogloversWith #WELLHITLERLOVEDDOGSTOO #wellguesswhatbuttercup #hitlerdrankwatertoo #andpainted #mastodon

  15. What is wrong with you? What is wrong with your brain? Why is it so unimaginable to you that another living thing may have different needs than yourself? Why are you so fucking angry at people for taking care of something that isn’t you, or themself?

    I am falling down a rabbit hole here. #reddit #dogs #dogsofmastodon #OneOfThePostsOnHere #IShitYouNot #WasOnePosterBraggingAboutHowTheyShutDownDogloversWith #WELLHITLERLOVEDDOGSTOO #wellguesswhatbuttercup #hitlerdrankwatertoo #andpainted #mastodon

  16. 𝗗𝗶𝗺𝗶𝘁𝗿𝗼𝘃 𝘃𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗹𝗮𝗮𝘁 𝗠𝘂𝗿𝗿𝗮𝘆 𝗶𝗻 𝗱𝗿𝗶𝗲 𝘀𝗲𝘁𝘀 𝗶𝗻 𝗕𝗿𝗶𝘀𝗯𝗮𝗻𝗲

    Grigor Dimitrov heeft zich op het ATP-toernooi van Brisbane in drie sets langs Andy Murray geknokt. Het werd 4-6 7-5 6-2 voor de Bulgaarse tennisser, die als tweede geplaatst is in de Australische stad. De avondpartij op nieuwjaarsdag duurde 2 uur en 27 minuten. Dimitrov, de nummer 14 van de wereld, maakte het af...

    rtlnieuws.nl/sport/artikel/542

    #DimitrovvsMurray #BrisbaneTennis #SetsVictory

  17. As of 16 November 2023, we achieved a 6-months milestone of having all our lessons use #TheCarpentriesWorkbench (our new lesson infrastructure)! 🎉 👏

    In this 18th update in The Dovetail series, documenting our transition to The Workbench, @zkamvar shares details about (and #CarpentriesGratitudes for) achieving this milestone: carpentries.org/blog/2023/11/s

  18. The first major announcement by Alberta's NDP today is a huge one: "Our commitment to integrated team-based care delivered in Family Health Clinics will mean that within 10 years, up to 1 million more Albertans will have access to a doctor within a day or two as part of family health clinics."
    Check out how this plan will be implemented in detail here: albertasfuture.ca/albertas-fut

    Please vote for your local ANDP candidate in May, and help make this happen.

    #abpoli #ableg #aBetterFuture

  19. Pop Culture Library Review @popculturelibraries.wordpress.com@popculturelibraries.wordpress.com ·

    Lending libraries for Nissa, Nowhere Space, and Kaisa in “Hilda”

    Kaisa smirks during a scene in the final season of Hilda

    Happy February! In early December 2023, Hilda aired its third, and final, season. It was a fitting end to an animated series which could (and should) have been longer. Unfortunately, Kaisa, the fan-favorite mysterious gothic librarian, got a short shift, as she had in Hilda the Mountain King. Even so, there are many library themes to discuss when it comes to the episode with her most prominent appearance, creation of a lending library by the protagonists, and connections to previous posts about her, Hilda, other series, and library concepts.

    In the seventh episode of the final season, entitled “Chapter 7: Strange Frequencies”, Hilda holds the hand of Tonto as they chase a nissa through nowhere space. They jump out of a card catalog, go running through the Trolberg library stacks, and jump inside a copier (also a portal into Nowhere Space) to the bewilderment of Kaisa, at first, before her eyes and body movement give the message that this is something she is used to. Later in that same episode, Hilda sets up a lending library for the nissa, so they can borrow items for a certain period of time, basically functioning like a public library. It seems to work well, from what I can tell.

    While it is not directly stated, there is no doubt in my mind that Hilda and her friends learned about this thanks to Kaisa. It would have been better to give Kaisa some speaking lines and have her directly. Perhaps this was originally included, but since the season was only seven episodes, and one special (the movie), it was half of the proceeding seasons, which had twelve episodes each! Such cuts by Netflix were confirmed by show director Andy Coyle.

    As I described her back on December 14, 2023, which some fans call “Kaisa Day”, she is a White female librarian (and witch) who is feisty, with unmatched, and extensive, knowledge of cemeteries and mystical items, with 170+ fan fics featuring her, ship her with Johanna (known as Sketchbook), Entrapta in She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, or draw parallels between her and Cassandra in Rapunzel’s Tangled AdventureShe has strict bosses, is skilled, but bashful,shown to be experiencing burnout and fatigue, even downplaying her personal knowledge at times, and has a unique style which fits with her personality, which can be calm, but also strict or stern. Even so, she clearly has insecurities and can feel like an outcast.

    Additionally, she engages in duties which resemble reference librarianship, likely believes that librarians are responsible for patrons’ safety, challenges established systems, and may even be working class, even as she holds herself back in other instances. The library’s classification may resemble those from the human world. She definitely looks content in the series finale when she eats a bag of Jorts given to her by David, and smiles, even after David’s Jorts are taken away, showing the strong friendship between them. Even so, she is possibly queer, as I noted in a blogpost some time ago.

    The episodes in Hilda are a night-and-day difference from the stereotypical evil librarian (who is dedicated to shushing her patrons) in Hamster & Gretel, who only serves as a plot device for Gretel to realize her brother is a hero. Funny enough, the librarian is voiced by the talented voice actress, Cree Summer, known for roles like Princess (then Queen) Kidagakash “Kida”  in Atlantis: The Lost Empire and Atlantis: Milo’s Return, Catwoman in DC Super Hero Girls, andPeabo in The Proud Family (and the reboot/revival).

    To add more detail to the aforementioned librarian in Hamster & Gretel, a middling all-ages Disney animated series, she is an old White lady wearing glasses dedicated to keeping the library quiet, shushing people when they make too much noise. In the episode, Kevin, and his sister, Gretel, make it to the periodical room where no electronics are allowed. Kevin finds out that the librarian wants to shush everyone in town for being too noisy. His voice is taken away by her Shushinator machine (created by Dr. Doofenschmirtz). She shushes the entire town but is stopped thanks to what Kevin read…in a library book. He is successful, Gretel and her animal companion, Hamster, assist him, and she punches the librarian.

    This makes you think. Did the episode writer (Joshua Pruett) or episode director (Erik Kling) have a bad experience in a library? Why would a show like that include such a sexist stereotype? Compared to Hilda, it makes clear which show wants to buck typical depictions and create more holistic characters, and which do not. Pruett is well-known for working on series like Milo Murphy’s Law, Onyx Equinox, and Phineas and Ferb. Erik Kling, another White man, directed episodes of animated series like Madagascar: A Little Wild. You would think that these talented people could avoid such stereotypes.

    Hilda surprised to see a running Nissa

    What the librarian in Hamster & Gretel did or any of the other atrocious examples of stereotypical librarians, especially those who excessively shush patrons, Kaisa would never do. She wants to uphold rules, but she would never go around and shush people. Instead, she’d be enjoying coffeehouse light jazz, or if in other moods, indie folk (Bon Iver), indie rock (Shoegaze), reggae (Ghost), heavy metal (Slipknot, the HU, Ministry, Bathory), alternative rock (Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Siouxsie and the Banshees), gothic rock (Joy Division, Bauhaus), or Steven Universe and Adventure Time soundtracks, as some fans suggested.

    All in all, I hope other characters in the future can have such an impact as Kaisa and promote the importance of librarians and libraries while both remain under attack more than ever.

    © 2024-2025 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.

    #burnout #CassandraTangled #CreeSummer #Entrapta #HamsterGretel #Hilda #HildaAndTheMountainKing #Kaisa #LGBTQ #librarianStereotypes #librarianStyle #MiloMurphySLaw #music #PhineasAndFerb #RapunzelSTangledAdventure #SheRaAndThePrincessesOfPower #shushing #visualImpairment #WhiteLibrarians #WhiteWomen

  20. Pop Culture Library Review @popculturelibraries.wordpress.com@popculturelibraries.wordpress.com ·

    Lending libraries for Nissa, Nowhere Space, and Kaisa in “Hilda”

    Kaisa smirks during a scene in the final season of Hilda

    Happy February! In early December 2023, Hilda aired its third, and final, season. It was a fitting end to an animated series which could (and should) have been longer. Unfortunately, Kaisa, the fan-favorite mysterious gothic librarian, got a short shift, as she had in Hilda the Mountain King. Even so, there are many library themes to discuss when it comes to the episode with her most prominent appearance, creation of a lending library by the protagonists, and connections to previous posts about her, Hilda, other series, and library concepts.

    In the seventh episode of the final season, entitled “Chapter 7: Strange Frequencies”, Hilda holds the hand of Tonto as they chase a nissa through nowhere space. They jump out of a card catalog, go running through the Trolberg library stacks, and jump inside a copier (also a portal into Nowhere Space) to the bewilderment of Kaisa, at first, before her eyes and body movement give the message that this is something she is used to. Later in that same episode, Hilda sets up a lending library for the nissa, so they can borrow items for a certain period of time, basically functioning like a public library. It seems to work well, from what I can tell.

    While it is not directly stated, there is no doubt in my mind that Hilda and her friends learned about this thanks to Kaisa. It would have been better to give Kaisa some speaking lines and have her directly. Perhaps this was originally included, but since the season was only seven episodes, and one special (the movie), it was half of the proceeding seasons, which had twelve episodes each! Such cuts by Netflix were confirmed by show director Andy Coyle.

    As I described her back on December 14, 2023, which some fans call “Kaisa Day”, she is a White female librarian (and witch) who is feisty, with unmatched, and extensive, knowledge of cemeteries and mystical items, with 170+ fan fics featuring her, ship her with Johanna (known as Sketchbook), Entrapta in She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, or draw parallels between her and Cassandra in Rapunzel’s Tangled AdventureShe has strict bosses, is skilled, but bashful,shown to be experiencing burnout and fatigue, even downplaying her personal knowledge at times, and has a unique style which fits with her personality, which can be calm, but also strict or stern. Even so, she clearly has insecurities and can feel like an outcast.

    Additionally, she engages in duties which resemble reference librarianship, likely believes that librarians are responsible for patrons’ safety, challenges established systems, and may even be working class, even as she holds herself back in other instances. The library’s classification may resemble those from the human world. She definitely looks content in the series finale when she eats a bag of Jorts given to her by David, and smiles, even after David’s Jorts are taken away, showing the strong friendship between them. Even so, she is possibly queer, as I noted in a blogpost some time ago.

    The episodes in Hilda are a night-and-day difference from the stereotypical evil librarian (who is dedicated to shushing her patrons) in Hamster & Gretel, who only serves as a plot device for Gretel to realize her brother is a hero. Funny enough, the librarian is voiced by the talented voice actress, Cree Summer, known for roles like Princess (then Queen) Kidagakash “Kida”  in Atlantis: The Lost Empire and Atlantis: Milo’s Return, Catwoman in DC Super Hero Girls, andPeabo in The Proud Family (and the reboot/revival).

    To add more detail to the aforementioned librarian in Hamster & Gretel, a middling all-ages Disney animated series, she is an old White lady wearing glasses dedicated to keeping the library quiet, shushing people when they make too much noise. In the episode, Kevin, and his sister, Gretel, make it to the periodical room where no electronics are allowed. Kevin finds out that the librarian wants to shush everyone in town for being too noisy. His voice is taken away by her Shushinator machine (created by Dr. Doofenschmirtz). She shushes the entire town but is stopped thanks to what Kevin read…in a library book. He is successful, Gretel and her animal companion, Hamster, assist him, and she punches the librarian.

    This makes you think. Did the episode writer (Joshua Pruett) or episode director (Erik Kling) have a bad experience in a library? Why would a show like that include such a sexist stereotype? Compared to Hilda, it makes clear which show wants to buck typical depictions and create more holistic characters, and which do not. Pruett is well-known for working on series like Milo Murphy’s Law, Onyx Equinox, and Phineas and Ferb. Erik Kling, another White man, directed episodes of animated series like Madagascar: A Little Wild. You would think that these talented people could avoid such stereotypes.

    Hilda surprised to see a running Nissa

    What the librarian in Hamster & Gretel did or any of the other atrocious examples of stereotypical librarians, especially those who excessively shush patrons, Kaisa would never do. She wants to uphold rules, but she would never go around and shush people. Instead, she’d be enjoying coffeehouse light jazz, or if in other moods, indie folk (Bon Iver), indie rock (Shoegaze), reggae (Ghost), heavy metal (Slipknot, the HU, Ministry, Bathory), alternative rock (Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Siouxsie and the Banshees), gothic rock (Joy Division, Bauhaus), or Steven Universe and Adventure Time soundtracks, as some fans suggested.

    All in all, I hope other characters in the future can have such an impact as Kaisa and promote the importance of librarians and libraries while both remain under attack more than ever.

    © 2024-2025 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.

    #burnout #CassandraTangled #CreeSummer #Entrapta #HamsterGretel #Hilda #HildaAndTheMountainKing #Kaisa #LGBTQ #librarianStereotypes #librarianStyle #MiloMurphySLaw #music #PhineasAndFerb #RapunzelSTangledAdventure #SheRaAndThePrincessesOfPower #shushing #visualImpairment #WhiteLibrarians #WhiteWomen

  21. Pop Culture Library Review @popculturelibraries.wordpress.com@popculturelibraries.wordpress.com ·

    Lending libraries for Nissa, Nowhere Space, and Kaisa in “Hilda”

    Kaisa smirks during a scene in the final season of Hilda

    Happy February! In early December 2023, Hilda aired its third, and final, season. It was a fitting end to an animated series which could (and should) have been longer. Unfortunately, Kaisa, the fan-favorite mysterious gothic librarian, got a short shift, as she had in Hilda the Mountain King. Even so, there are many library themes to discuss when it comes to the episode with her most prominent appearance, creation of a lending library by the protagonists, and connections to previous posts about her, Hilda, other series, and library concepts.

    In the seventh episode of the final season, entitled “Chapter 7: Strange Frequencies”, Hilda holds the hand of Tonto as they chase a nissa through nowhere space. They jump out of a card catalog, go running through the Trolberg library stacks, and jump inside a copier (also a portal into Nowhere Space) to the bewilderment of Kaisa, at first, before her eyes and body movement give the message that this is something she is used to. Later in that same episode, Hilda sets up a lending library for the nissa, so they can borrow items for a certain period of time, basically functioning like a public library. It seems to work well, from what I can tell.

    While it is not directly stated, there is no doubt in my mind that Hilda and her friends learned about this thanks to Kaisa. It would have been better to give Kaisa some speaking lines and have her directly. Perhaps this was originally included, but since the season was only seven episodes, and one special (the movie), it was half of the proceeding seasons, which had twelve episodes each! Such cuts by Netflix were confirmed by show director Andy Coyle.

    As I described her back on December 14, 2023, which some fans call “Kaisa Day”, she is a White female librarian (and witch) who is feisty, with unmatched, and extensive, knowledge of cemeteries and mystical items, with 170+ fan fics featuring her, ship her with Johanna (known as Sketchbook), Entrapta in She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, or draw parallels between her and Cassandra in Rapunzel’s Tangled AdventureShe has strict bosses, is skilled, but bashful,shown to be experiencing burnout and fatigue, even downplaying her personal knowledge at times, and has a unique style which fits with her personality, which can be calm, but also strict or stern. Even so, she clearly has insecurities and can feel like an outcast.

    Additionally, she engages in duties which resemble reference librarianship, likely believes that librarians are responsible for patrons’ safety, challenges established systems, and may even be working class, even as she holds herself back in other instances. The library’s classification may resemble those from the human world. She definitely looks content in the series finale when she eats a bag of Jorts given to her by David, and smiles, even after David’s Jorts are taken away, showing the strong friendship between them. Even so, she is possibly queer, as I noted in a blogpost some time ago.

    The episodes in Hilda are a night-and-day difference from the stereotypical evil librarian (who is dedicated to shushing her patrons) in Hamster & Gretel, who only serves as a plot device for Gretel to realize her brother is a hero. Funny enough, the librarian is voiced by the talented voice actress, Cree Summer, known for roles like Princess (then Queen) Kidagakash “Kida”  in Atlantis: The Lost Empire and Atlantis: Milo’s Return, Catwoman in DC Super Hero Girls, andPeabo in The Proud Family (and the reboot/revival).

    To add more detail to the aforementioned librarian in Hamster & Gretel, a middling all-ages Disney animated series, she is an old White lady wearing glasses dedicated to keeping the library quiet, shushing people when they make too much noise. In the episode, Kevin, and his sister, Gretel, make it to the periodical room where no electronics are allowed. Kevin finds out that the librarian wants to shush everyone in town for being too noisy. His voice is taken away by her Shushinator machine (created by Dr. Doofenschmirtz). She shushes the entire town but is stopped thanks to what Kevin read…in a library book. He is successful, Gretel and her animal companion, Hamster, assist him, and she punches the librarian.

    This makes you think. Did the episode writer (Joshua Pruett) or episode director (Erik Kling) have a bad experience in a library? Why would a show like that include such a sexist stereotype? Compared to Hilda, it makes clear which show wants to buck typical depictions and create more holistic characters, and which do not. Pruett is well-known for working on series like Milo Murphy’s Law, Onyx Equinox, and Phineas and Ferb. Erik Kling, another White man, directed episodes of animated series like Madagascar: A Little Wild. You would think that these talented people could avoid such stereotypes.

    Hilda surprised to see a running Nissa

    What the librarian in Hamster & Gretel did or any of the other atrocious examples of stereotypical librarians, especially those who excessively shush patrons, Kaisa would never do. She wants to uphold rules, but she would never go around and shush people. Instead, she’d be enjoying coffeehouse light jazz, or if in other moods, indie folk (Bon Iver), indie rock (Shoegaze), reggae (Ghost), heavy metal (Slipknot, the HU, Ministry, Bathory), alternative rock (Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Siouxsie and the Banshees), gothic rock (Joy Division, Bauhaus), or Steven Universe and Adventure Time soundtracks, as some fans suggested.

    All in all, I hope other characters in the future can have such an impact as Kaisa and promote the importance of librarians and libraries while both remain under attack more than ever.

    © 2024-2025 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.

    #burnout #CassandraTangled #CreeSummer #Entrapta #HamsterGretel #Hilda #HildaAndTheMountainKing #Kaisa #LGBTQ #librarianStereotypes #librarianStyle #MiloMurphySLaw #music #PhineasAndFerb #RapunzelSTangledAdventure #SheRaAndThePrincessesOfPower #shushing #visualImpairment #WhiteLibrarians #WhiteWomen

  22. Pop Culture Library Review @popculturelibraries.wordpress.com@popculturelibraries.wordpress.com ·

    Lending libraries for Nissa, Nowhere Space, and Kaisa in “Hilda”

    Kaisa smirks during a scene in the final season of Hilda

    Happy February! In early December 2023, Hilda aired its third, and final, season. It was a fitting end to an animated series which could (and should) have been longer. Unfortunately, Kaisa, the fan-favorite mysterious gothic librarian, got a short shift, as she had in Hilda the Mountain King. Even so, there are many library themes to discuss when it comes to the episode with her most prominent appearance, creation of a lending library by the protagonists, and connections to previous posts about her, Hilda, other series, and library concepts.

    In the seventh episode of the final season, entitled “Chapter 7: Strange Frequencies”, Hilda holds the hand of Tonto as they chase a nissa through nowhere space. They jump out of a card catalog, go running through the Trolberg library stacks, and jump inside a copier (also a portal into Nowhere Space) to the bewilderment of Kaisa, at first, before her eyes and body movement give the message that this is something she is used to. Later in that same episode, Hilda sets up a lending library for the nissa, so they can borrow items for a certain period of time, basically functioning like a public library. It seems to work well, from what I can tell.

    While it is not directly stated, there is no doubt in my mind that Hilda and her friends learned about this thanks to Kaisa. It would have been better to give Kaisa some speaking lines and have her directly. Perhaps this was originally included, but since the season was only seven episodes, and one special (the movie), it was half of the proceeding seasons, which had twelve episodes each! Such cuts by Netflix were confirmed by show director Andy Coyle.

    As I described her back on December 14, 2023, which some fans call “Kaisa Day”, she is a White female librarian (and witch) who is feisty, with unmatched, and extensive, knowledge of cemeteries and mystical items, with 170+ fan fics featuring her, ship her with Johanna (known as Sketchbook), Entrapta in She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, or draw parallels between her and Cassandra in Rapunzel’s Tangled AdventureShe has strict bosses, is skilled, but bashful,shown to be experiencing burnout and fatigue, even downplaying her personal knowledge at times, and has a unique style which fits with her personality, which can be calm, but also strict or stern. Even so, she clearly has insecurities and can feel like an outcast.

    Additionally, she engages in duties which resemble reference librarianship, likely believes that librarians are responsible for patrons’ safety, challenges established systems, and may even be working class, even as she holds herself back in other instances. The library’s classification may resemble those from the human world. She definitely looks content in the series finale when she eats a bag of Jorts given to her by David, and smiles, even after David’s Jorts are taken away, showing the strong friendship between them. Even so, she is possibly queer, as I noted in a blogpost some time ago.

    The episodes in Hilda are a night-and-day difference from the stereotypical evil librarian (who is dedicated to shushing her patrons) in Hamster & Gretel, who only serves as a plot device for Gretel to realize her brother is a hero. Funny enough, the librarian is voiced by the talented voice actress, Cree Summer, known for roles like Princess (then Queen) Kidagakash “Kida”  in Atlantis: The Lost Empire and Atlantis: Milo’s Return, Catwoman in DC Super Hero Girls, andPeabo in The Proud Family (and the reboot/revival).

    To add more detail to the aforementioned librarian in Hamster & Gretel, a middling all-ages Disney animated series, she is an old White lady wearing glasses dedicated to keeping the library quiet, shushing people when they make too much noise. In the episode, Kevin, and his sister, Gretel, make it to the periodical room where no electronics are allowed. Kevin finds out that the librarian wants to shush everyone in town for being too noisy. His voice is taken away by her Shushinator machine (created by Dr. Doofenschmirtz). She shushes the entire town but is stopped thanks to what Kevin read…in a library book. He is successful, Gretel and her animal companion, Hamster, assist him, and she punches the librarian.

    This makes you think. Did the episode writer (Joshua Pruett) or episode director (Erik Kling) have a bad experience in a library? Why would a show like that include such a sexist stereotype? Compared to Hilda, it makes clear which show wants to buck typical depictions and create more holistic characters, and which do not. Pruett is well-known for working on series like Milo Murphy’s Law, Onyx Equinox, and Phineas and Ferb. Erik Kling, another White man, directed episodes of animated series like Madagascar: A Little Wild. You would think that these talented people could avoid such stereotypes.

    Hilda surprised to see a running Nissa

    What the librarian in Hamster & Gretel did or any of the other atrocious examples of stereotypical librarians, especially those who excessively shush patrons, Kaisa would never do. She wants to uphold rules, but she would never go around and shush people. Instead, she’d be enjoying coffeehouse light jazz, or if in other moods, indie folk (Bon Iver), indie rock (Shoegaze), reggae (Ghost), heavy metal (Slipknot, the HU, Ministry, Bathory), alternative rock (Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Siouxsie and the Banshees), gothic rock (Joy Division, Bauhaus), or Steven Universe and Adventure Time soundtracks, as some fans suggested.

    All in all, I hope other characters in the future can have such an impact as Kaisa and promote the importance of librarians and libraries while both remain under attack more than ever.

    © 2024-2025 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.

    #burnout #CassandraTangled #CreeSummer #Entrapta #HamsterGretel #Hilda #HildaAndTheMountainKing #Kaisa #LGBTQ #librarianStereotypes #librarianStyle #MiloMurphySLaw #music #PhineasAndFerb #RapunzelSTangledAdventure #SheRaAndThePrincessesOfPower #shushing #visualImpairment #WhiteLibrarians #WhiteWomen

  23. Pop Culture Library Review @popculturelibraries.wordpress.com@popculturelibraries.wordpress.com ·

    Lending libraries for Nissa, Nowhere Space, and Kaisa in “Hilda”

    Kaisa smirks during a scene in the final season of Hilda

    Happy February! In early December 2023, Hilda aired its third, and final, season. It was a fitting end to an animated series which could (and should) have been longer. Unfortunately, Kaisa, the fan-favorite mysterious gothic librarian, got a short shift, as she had in Hilda the Mountain King. Even so, there are many library themes to discuss when it comes to the episode with her most prominent appearance, creation of a lending library by the protagonists, and connections to previous posts about her, Hilda, other series, and library concepts.

    In the seventh episode of the final season, entitled “Chapter 7: Strange Frequencies”, Hilda holds the hand of Tonto as they chase a nissa through nowhere space. They jump out of a card catalog, go running through the Trolberg library stacks, and jump inside a copier (also a portal into Nowhere Space) to the bewilderment of Kaisa, at first, before her eyes and body movement give the message that this is something she is used to. Later in that same episode, Hilda sets up a lending library for the nissa, so they can borrow items for a certain period of time, basically functioning like a public library. It seems to work well, from what I can tell.

    While it is not directly stated, there is no doubt in my mind that Hilda and her friends learned about this thanks to Kaisa. It would have been better to give Kaisa some speaking lines and have her directly. Perhaps this was originally included, but since the season was only seven episodes, and one special (the movie), it was half of the proceeding seasons, which had twelve episodes each! Such cuts by Netflix were confirmed by show director Andy Coyle.

    As I described her back on December 14, 2023, which some fans call “Kaisa Day”, she is a White female librarian (and witch) who is feisty, with unmatched, and extensive, knowledge of cemeteries and mystical items, with 170+ fan fics featuring her, ship her with Johanna (known as Sketchbook), Entrapta in She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, or draw parallels between her and Cassandra in Rapunzel’s Tangled AdventureShe has strict bosses, is skilled, but bashful,shown to be experiencing burnout and fatigue, even downplaying her personal knowledge at times, and has a unique style which fits with her personality, which can be calm, but also strict or stern. Even so, she clearly has insecurities and can feel like an outcast.

    Additionally, she engages in duties which resemble reference librarianship, likely believes that librarians are responsible for patrons’ safety, challenges established systems, and may even be working class, even as she holds herself back in other instances. The library’s classification may resemble those from the human world. She definitely looks content in the series finale when she eats a bag of Jorts given to her by David, and smiles, even after David’s Jorts are taken away, showing the strong friendship between them. Even so, she is possibly queer, as I noted in a blogpost some time ago.

    The episodes in Hilda are a night-and-day difference from the stereotypical evil librarian (who is dedicated to shushing her patrons) in Hamster & Gretel, who only serves as a plot device for Gretel to realize her brother is a hero. Funny enough, the librarian is voiced by the talented voice actress, Cree Summer, known for roles like Princess (then Queen) Kidagakash “Kida”  in Atlantis: The Lost Empire and Atlantis: Milo’s Return, Catwoman in DC Super Hero Girls, andPeabo in The Proud Family (and the reboot/revival).

    To add more detail to the aforementioned librarian in Hamster & Gretel, a middling all-ages Disney animated series, she is an old White lady wearing glasses dedicated to keeping the library quiet, shushing people when they make too much noise. In the episode, Kevin, and his sister, Gretel, make it to the periodical room where no electronics are allowed. Kevin finds out that the librarian wants to shush everyone in town for being too noisy. His voice is taken away by her Shushinator machine (created by Dr. Doofenschmirtz). She shushes the entire town but is stopped thanks to what Kevin read…in a library book. He is successful, Gretel and her animal companion, Hamster, assist him, and she punches the librarian.

    This makes you think. Did the episode writer (Joshua Pruett) or episode director (Erik Kling) have a bad experience in a library? Why would a show like that include such a sexist stereotype? Compared to Hilda, it makes clear which show wants to buck typical depictions and create more holistic characters, and which do not. Pruett is well-known for working on series like Milo Murphy’s Law, Onyx Equinox, and Phineas and Ferb. Erik Kling, another White man, directed episodes of animated series like Madagascar: A Little Wild. You would think that these talented people could avoid such stereotypes.

    Hilda surprised to see a running Nissa

    What the librarian in Hamster & Gretel did or any of the other atrocious examples of stereotypical librarians, especially those who excessively shush patrons, Kaisa would never do. She wants to uphold rules, but she would never go around and shush people. Instead, she’d be enjoying coffeehouse light jazz, or if in other moods, indie folk (Bon Iver), indie rock (Shoegaze), reggae (Ghost), heavy metal (Slipknot, the HU, Ministry, Bathory), alternative rock (Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Siouxsie and the Banshees), gothic rock (Joy Division, Bauhaus), or Steven Universe and Adventure Time soundtracks, as some fans suggested.

    All in all, I hope other characters in the future can have such an impact as Kaisa and promote the importance of librarians and libraries while both remain under attack more than ever.

    © 2024-2025 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.

    #burnout #CassandraTangled #CreeSummer #Entrapta #HamsterGretel #Hilda #HildaAndTheMountainKing #Kaisa #LGBTQ #librarianStereotypes #librarianStyle #MiloMurphySLaw #music #PhineasAndFerb #RapunzelSTangledAdventure #SheRaAndThePrincessesOfPower #shushing #visualImpairment #WhiteLibrarians #WhiteWomen

  24. Ons Erfdeel over #Reinbertbio: ‘Hommage aan De Leeuw’

    Op 14 maart was het precies één jaar geleden dat mijn biografie Reinbert de Leeuw, mens of melodie verscheen bij Leporello Uitgevers. De feestvreugde werd verhoogd doordat juist op die dag een mooie recensie verscheen in het Vlaams-Nederlandse culturele tijdschrift Ons Erfdeel, onder de titel ‘Hedendaags hoofd, romantisch hart’. Auteur Cas Smithuijsen benadrukt  het belang van De Leeuw voor het Nederlandse muziekleven en noemt het door mij geschreven portret ‘integer en – belangrijker misschien nog – goed gelijkend’. Het is volgens hem een ‘hommage aan De Leeuw’.

    Smithuijsen meent dat ik mijn onderwerp het dichtst benader in de passages over de actrice Barbara Sukowa en concludeert: ‘Reinbert de Leeuw is met heel zijn hoofd betrokken bij de muziek van nu. Maar uit zijn hart is de romantiek nooit verdwenen.’ Smithuijsen liet zich hierbij duidelijk inspireren door een (overigens niet door hem geciteerde) uitspraak van Sukowa in mijn biografie: ‘Reinbert is een echte romanticus en juist daarom kan hij moderne muziek zo goed dirigeren. Die kan wel een dosis emotionaliteit gebruiken. Reinberts hartstocht klinkt door in zijn uitvoeringen.’ 

    Op deze zonnige verjaardag trof ik mijn uitgever Dolf Weverink bij boekhandel Athenaeum, waar precies een jaar geleden de zegetocht van mijn Reinbertbio begon.

    One year after: Thea Derks + Dolf Weverink met #Reinbertbio bij Athenaeum Boekhandel Amsterdam 13-3-2015

    Ter felicitatie kocht Dolf voor mij een exemplaar van Ons Erfdeel bij het perscentrum van Athenaeum. Het leuke was, dat het al net zo zonnig was als vorig jaar, toen we het boek per auto en per fiets bij de boekhandels in Amsterdam en Noord-Holland langs brachten, omdat de officiële distributie vanwege de perikelen rond de verschijning, pas na het weekend op gang kon komen. Een tweede toeval wilde, dat ik de avond ervoor de inleiding verzorgde bij een door Reinbert de Leeuw gedirigeerd concert met koormuziek van Janácek. Ik schreef er een recensie over.

    Maandag 16 maart sprak ik voor Cultuurpers met Willem Jeths, Componist des Vaderlands, over zijn nieuwe compositie Conductus, die hij schreef in opdracht vanhet Rotterdams Philharmonisch Orkest t.g.v. de herdenking van het bombardement op Rotterdam in 1940.

    Thea Derks + Willem Jeths, 16-3-2015

    Twee dagen later sprak ik met de altvioliste Tabea Zimmermann over Paul Hindemith, wiens altvioolconcert Der Schwanendreher zij op 20 maart zou uitvoeren met het Radio Filharmonisch Orkest in de AVROTROS serie DeVrijdag van Vredenburg. 

    Tabea Zimmermann + Thea Derks MCO Hilversum 18-3-2015

    Maandag 23 maart nam ik de zevende aflevering op van mijn programma Panorama de Leeuw op de Concertzender, met onder andere muziek van Daniel Ruyneman en Rob Du Bois, twee belangrijke voorvechters van hedendaagse muziek in Nederland. Dankzij een van hun series maakte Reinbert de Leeuw in 1966 zijn doorbraak als componist. Via deze link vindt u de uitzendgegevens en kunt u vanaf 2 april de uitzending ook terugluisteren. De aflevering van 4 maart j.l. vindt u hier.

    Op 26 maart ging Jeths’ Conductus in première in de concertserie De Vrijdag van Vredenburg. Ik sprak tijdens de inleiding met hem voor een zeer geïnteresseerd publiek.

    Thea Derks + Willem Jeths, TivoliVredenburg 26 maart 2015

    Een dag later verzorgde ik weer de inleiding in deze serie, ditmaal bij een concert van het Groot Omroepkoor en een ensemble uit het Radio Filharmonisch Orkest. Voor de live uitzending op Radio4 had ik ook een reportage gemaakt van werken van Pascal Dusapin en Edgard Varèse.

    Het werd een zeer levendige inleiding, waarin ik sprak met de alt Els Liebregt en de bariton Daniel Herman Mostert over Dona Eis van Pascal Dusapin; met Karel Deseure over het door hem gedirigeerde Octandre van Edgard Varèse, en met de fagottist Freek Sluijs over het Divertimento KV 270 van Mozart. Hiervan werd een deeltje gespeeld door een kwintet uit het RFO.

    Thea Derks + Karel Deseure tijdens inleiding TivoliVredenburg 27-3-2015

    De volgende dag moest ik alweer vroeg op, vanwege mijn inleiding bij de opening van het Boulezfestival t.g.v. de 90e verjaardag van Pierre Boulez’, onderdeel van het festival Dag in de Branding. Ik sprak met Etty Mulder, oprichter en voorzitter van de Stichting Pierre Boulez, voor een goed gevuld Zuiderstrandtheater in Scheveningen. Ze gaf mij het eerste exemplaar van haar nieuwe boek Het vruchtbare land, genoemd naar een artikel van Boulez over de relatie tussen zijn muziek en het werk van de schilder Paul Klee.

    In haar boek verhaalt Mulder op een persoonlijke manier over haar ontdekking van en verhouding tot de muziek van Boulez. Het bevat tevens vrije vertalingen van enkele van diens artikelen, en gedichten van door hem bewonderde poëten. Als dank overhandigde ik haar een exemplaar van mijn #Reinbertbio, waarop zij tot mijn verrassing ontstak in een uitvoerige laudatio.

    ‘Dit boek kan niet vaak genoeg overhandigd worden, vanwege het grote belang voor het Nederlandse muziekleven,’ sprak zij. Ze refereerde ook aan mijn succesvolle strijd tegen de ‘tirannie’ van krachten die de publicatie hadden trachten te voorkomen en onderstreepte het belang van het vrije woord. Ik werd er een beetje verlegen van.

    Thea Derks interviewt Etty Mulder in het Zuiderstrandtheater 29-3-2015

    Na de opening presenteerde het Asko|Schönberg een concert met werken van o.a. Boulez, Stockhausen en Ravel, en bracht Slagwerk Den Haag samen met studenten van het Koninklijk Conservatorium een wervelende uitvoering van Drumming van Steve Reich. Daarna verkasten we naar het Korzo Theater voor een enerverend concert door drie pianisten en twee slagwerkers, met o.a. het destructieve Pianoforte van Dick Raaijmakers en Makrokosmos III van George Crumb. Het avondprogramma in de Anton Philipszaal moest ik vanwege kafkaëske autoperikelen missen.

    De volgende ochtend was er een door de Stichting Pierre Boulez georganiseerd en door Hans Ester gepresenteerd symposium in het conservatorium. Etty Mulder opende met een aanklacht tegen de makers van de catalogus bij de tentoonstelling Pierre Boulez in de Philharmonie in Parijs. Tot haar verbazing en ergernis besteden zij hierin weinig aandacht aan Boulez’ dirigeerwerk, zijn geschriften en zijn intermediale werkwijze. Het boek is weliswaar prachtig vormgegeven, maar vorm regeert over inhoud en er is sprake van ‘a fetishism of famous names, without any attempt at deeper reflection’. Daar kunnen de Fransen het mee doen.

    Hierna peilde ik de mening van Professor Doktor Werner Klüppelholz over de veelal polemische artikelen van Pierre Boulez, zijn relatie tot Mauricio Kagel en andere componisten en de traceerbaarheid van zijn intermediale inspiratiebronnen in diens eigen muziek. Naar aanleiding van het typografisch bijzonder vormgegeven Coup de dés van Stéphane Mallarmé, dat voor Boulez een doorslaggevende rol speelde, merkte hij droogjes op: ‘Cursiveringen in muziek hóór je niet…’ De vlot causerende, zeer vrij associërende professor doctor kreeg keer op keer de lachers op zijn hand.

    Thea Derks + Werner Klüppelholz, Koninklijk Conservatorium 29-3-2015

    Daarna sprak Elmer Schönberger over maakbare muziek; nam Maarten Brandt de kunst van het programmeren onder de loep; vertelde Emanuel Overbeeke over de relatie tussen Boulez en Ravel; gaf Eveline Nikkels een levendige beschouwing over Boulez’ relatie tot Alban Berg en sprak Wim Markus over Boulez en Adorno. De jonge Italiaanse pianist Alessandro Soccorsi gaf een indrukwekkende vertolking van de Sonate nummer 3 van Boulez. De middag werd afgesloten met een rondetafelgesprek, dat ik echter miste, omdat ik de op mijn instigatie uitgenodigde Werner Klüppelholz ging uitzwaaien.

    #AlbanBerg #AllessandroSoccorsi #AthenaeumBoekandel #CasSmithuijsen #Concertzender #Conductus #DagInDeBranding #DaniëlRuyneman #DanielHermanMostert #DerSchwanendreher #DolfWeverink #ElmerSchönberger #ElsLiebregt #EmanuelOverbeeke #EttyMulder #EvelineNikkels #FreekSluijs #HansEster #KarelDesueure #KoninklijkConservatorium #LeporelloUitgevers #MaartenBrandt #MauricioKagel #MensOfMelodie #OnsErfdeel #PanoramaDeLeeuw #PaulHindemith #PierreBoulez #ReinbertDeLeeuw #Reinbertbio #RobDuBois #RotterdamsPhilharmonischOrkest #TabeaZimmermann #TheaDerks #TheodorAdorno #TivoliVredenburg #VrijdagVanVredenburg #WernerKlüppelholz #WillemJeths #WimMarkus #Zuiderstrandtheater

  25. ¿Cómo fue vivir en el Barrio del Pilar, y cómo pinta le futuro? - Charla-Debate con Grupo de Historia Urbana y Club de Debates Urbanos

    CSA La Piluka, sábado, 29 de marzo, 18:00 CET

    🔥EL SÁBADO QUE VIENE TENEMOS CITA🔥

    Vente un día más a @centro.social.lapiluka , esta vez a conocer la historia de cómo se construyó nuestro barrio y a debatir sobre las implicaciones que podrá tener en nuestras vidas la Operación Chamartín.

    Estaremos charlando con compis del GRUPO DE HISTORIA URBANA DEL PILAR y del CLUB DE DEBATES URBANOS

    y luego nos vamos juntas a la Sala Starving, a los super conciertos de Ruido de Barrio a seguir celebrando el 25 aniversario de La Piluka 😎

    mad.convoca.la/event/como-fue-

  26. Presentación 💥ASAMBLEA DE VIVIENDA DEL PILAR 💥

    CSA La Piluka, viernes, 21 de marzo, 19:00 CET

    De nuevas en redes y en el barrio, aquí está la 💥ASAMBLEA DE VIVIENDA DEL PILAR 💥

    Somos un grupo de personas que no pueden más con lo difícil que se ha vuelto vivir en su propio barrio, ¿te pasa lo mismo? ¡Vamos a cambiarlo juntas!

    Pásate a conocernos:

    📆 VIERNES 21 DE MARZO

    📍CSA LA PILUKA, plaza Corcubión 16

    Será un evento de presentación en el que

    🗣charlaremos sobre la situación de la vivienda en el Barrio del Pilar (y en Madrid en general, porque tela como está el patio)

    🫂conoceremos a otras personas que también luchan por el derecho a una vivienda digna

    🍽 tendremos tapas ricas ricas y espacio para conocernos tranquilamente

    Os contaremos cómo queremos organizar las futuras asambleas y cómo vamos a luchar por nuestros derechos

    ¡NOS APOYAMOS JUNTAS!

    https://www.instagram.com/p/DHOGMteoEV4/?igsh=MTlrc20zbGJndzM3cA==

    mad.convoca.la/event/presentac

  27. ¿Cómo fue vivir en el Barrio del Pilar, y cómo pinta le futuro? - Charla-Debate con Grupo de Historia Urbana y Club de Debates Urbanos

    CSA La Piluka, sábado, 29 de marzo, 18:00 CET

    🔥EL SÁBADO QUE VIENE TENEMOS CITA🔥

    Vente un día más a @centro.social.lapiluka , esta vez a conocer la historia de cómo se construyó nuestro barrio y a debatir sobre las implicaciones que podrá tener en nuestras vidas la Operación Chamartín.

    Estaremos charlando con compis del GRUPO DE HISTORIA URBANA DEL PILAR y del CLUB DE DEBATES URBANOS

    y luego nos vamos juntas a la Sala Starving, a los super conciertos de Ruido de Barrio a seguir celebrando el 25 aniversario de La Piluka 😎

    mad.convoca.la/event/como-fue-

  28. ¿Cómo fue vivir en el Barrio del Pilar, y cómo pinta le futuro? - Charla-Debate con Grupo de Historia Urbana y Club de Debates Urbanos

    CSA La Piluka, sábado, 29 de marzo, 18:00 CET

    🔥EL SÁBADO QUE VIENE TENEMOS CITA🔥

    Vente un día más a @centro.social.lapiluka , esta vez a conocer la historia de cómo se construyó nuestro barrio y a debatir sobre las implicaciones que podrá tener en nuestras vidas la Operación Chamartín.

    Estaremos charlando con compis del GRUPO DE HISTORIA URBANA DEL PILAR y del CLUB DE DEBATES URBANOS

    y luego nos vamos juntas a la Sala Starving, a los super conciertos de Ruido de Barrio a seguir celebrando el 25 aniversario de La Piluka 😎

    mad.convoca.la/event/como-fue-

  29. ¿Cómo fue vivir en el Barrio del Pilar, y cómo pinta le futuro? - Charla-Debate con Grupo de Historia Urbana y Club de Debates Urbanos

    CSA La Piluka, sábado, 29 de marzo, 18:00 CET

    🔥EL SÁBADO QUE VIENE TENEMOS CITA🔥

    Vente un día más a @centro.social.lapiluka , esta vez a conocer la historia de cómo se construyó nuestro barrio y a debatir sobre las implicaciones que podrá tener en nuestras vidas la Operación Chamartín.

    Estaremos charlando con compis del GRUPO DE HISTORIA URBANA DEL PILAR y del CLUB DE DEBATES URBANOS

    y luego nos vamos juntas a la Sala Starving, a los super conciertos de Ruido de Barrio a seguir celebrando el 25 aniversario de La Piluka 😎

    mad.convoca.la/event/como-fue-

  30. ¿Cómo fue vivir en el Barrio del Pilar, y cómo pinta le futuro? - Charla-Debate con Grupo de Historia Urbana y Club de Debates Urbanos

    CSA La Piluka, sábado, 29 de marzo, 18:00 CET

    🔥EL SÁBADO QUE VIENE TENEMOS CITA🔥

    Vente un día más a @centro.social.lapiluka , esta vez a conocer la historia de cómo se construyó nuestro barrio y a debatir sobre las implicaciones que podrá tener en nuestras vidas la Operación Chamartín.

    Estaremos charlando con compis del GRUPO DE HISTORIA URBANA DEL PILAR y del CLUB DE DEBATES URBANOS

    y luego nos vamos juntas a la Sala Starving, a los super conciertos de Ruido de Barrio a seguir celebrando el 25 aniversario de La Piluka 😎

    mad.convoca.la/event/como-fue-