Is there a good free/cheap service that rolls together a bunch of rss feeds into one “master” version? As I struggle to pull together a coherent personal website strategy, I’m finding that I don’t have a single feed link to send someone who wants to follow my blog posts.
Pen Pals. Online, in public. I love it. I first ran across this concept on Jerrod Blundy’s HeyDingus blog, but it looks like he was inspired by Jason Becker’s Letters Project. I see that Kev Quirk has joined in too. I’d love to give this a go, perhaps later in the year.
Today’s addition to #Junited2024.
I got into minimalism in my 30s and purged half my stuff. But I now see it as a useful, but insufficient, frame for consumer purchases. Less stuff isn’t inherently better—at least not for the life I want to live. Here’s an example from my life that was anti-minimalism, but made my life better.

One of the weird—but useful—outcomes of the pandemic is that because my wife and I had to quarantine from each other several times, we created a decent system for doing that. Both sides of the house have a desk, bed, tv, etc.
So when one of us now gets sick, it’s easy to separate for a few days. 😷
Homemade music videos
I’m a fan of homemade music videos for ridiculous songs.
Not the influencer-quality videos you can make today, with a fancy iPhone and great editing apps. Nah, I prefer the ones from yesteryear where the tools had no auto mode and people weren’t routinely filming themselves for Reels or Tiktok.
I came across a great one yesterday when I went searching for a song I like that occasionally pops up on an Irish drinking sing-along Pandora station we enjoy. It’s a short but catchy song called The Gates by Da Vinci’s Notebook1, which details an IT disaster via “comedic a cappella” (is that a thing? I guess it’s a thing).
So I went on Youtube, searched for the song, and a high school student’s class project from 12 years ago came up. It’s hilarious in all the right ways, including easter eggs in the credits.

That kid seems fun, doesn’t he?
The video has probably overtaken my previous favorite: a much more poorly produced family tribute video for Weird Al’s song “Biggest Ball of Twine in Minnesota."
As an official twine ball aficionado—yes, I’ve visited all four of them (each of which involves a fun story2), and even owned BallsOfTwine.com for a while (a never-quite-launched project dedicated to fun Roadside Oddities)—I really loved that video.
It’s extremely amateurish, which is a critical component of its charm. The camera work is terrible, the “actors” aren’t exactly hitting their lines, and the husband clearly owes his wife immensely for putting up with the whole thing.
And of course, it’s an entire damn song, a seven-plus minute song, dedicated to a Twine Ball, so of course I’m in. Did I mention that it seemingly wasn’t even produced for distribution? Nope, this was a passion project, pure and simple. A “Great Family Adventure,” as they called it in the opening title. The only way we can watch it is because the sister of the protagonist3 uploaded it to her own Youtube account.
It reminds me a lot of the personal websites many of us built before social media platforms took over personal expression online (then enshittified themselves).
I hope we don’t lose dare I say triumphs like this. But I suspect that we have, as modern apps + our cultural fascination with publishing highlight videos of our lives + the casino of virality + side hustle culture probably dustbins most uniquely pure hobbyist efforts like this.
I mean, it’s sorta like the whole endeavor of making a twine ball, as I mentioned in an article written about the song (Medium link):
Jones felt this too, especially compared to the heavily advertised presence of other roadside attractions. As he explains, “That’s got to be a hobby of love to start that. You don’t start wrapping a twine ball thinking you’re on to a million-dollar business venture. That’s not how that starts. I really appreciate, especially in today’s side hustle culture, that there are big endeavors people do just because it’s a fun hobby to them, it’s something that they just enjoy doing.” Just like the video that inspired him to go in the first place, the important element of the twine ball is the passion, not the product.
If you’re pursuing a similar hobby of love, really anything of that sort—and especially if it’s some wacky shit like a twine ball—I’d enjoy hearing about it!
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If you enjoyed The Gates, you might also like two of their other songs: the also catchy Another Irish Drinking Song, and perhaps Enormous Penis, their “hit.” ↩︎
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Ok, it just occurred to me that my twine ball quest is literally
briefly mentionedenshrined in the US Congressional Record, which is absolutely fucking hilarious. Also, damn I need to write a blog post on each of those first Twine Ball visits… ↩︎ -
That makes the video sound way fancier than it is. ↩︎
PikaPods - Instant Open Source App Hosting looks interesting for some self-hosted apps.
I ran across this photo I took during a quick fast food stop in a small rural Texas town during a road trip last month. It reminded me of something I’ve been thinking about during my travels the last few years, so I wrote a little bit about it today.
#blogging #america #ruralamerica

A genius runs this gas station.

One of the things I hate most about being sick is that not only do you have to cancel all the fun stuff you might have had planned (as I’ve had to this week), but I’m also completely useless to get anything productive done.
I have just zero motivation, level of focus, basic competence, or desire to get anything done. Nada. Zilch. So it feels like doubly-wasted time. Here I am not doing the things I want to be doing, and can’t even get some stuff done that will make future-me happy. Bleh.
Brendan reposts this every year, and every year I reread it. Make 2024 The Year Of Maximum Enthusiasm - today’s contribution for #Junited
I ran across Keenan’s 2021 post Hey, so, I think I fucking hate the internet, which is about how I felt about twitter at the time, too. Here’s an entertaining song that describes what living your life in a feed feels like.
The last six weeks or so have been a crazy blur, and I just realized that I didn’t get a chance to post much from our 6800-mile road trip.
Anyway, one of the highlights was hanging out with our buddy Doc at several days of the French Quarter Fest in New Orleans.

Here are a bunch of ways to get old school Google search results—you know, just the ten blue links.
Finally added an /interests page to my website.
I use RSS as a buffet, not a task list
I ran across this (very well done) post on hating RSS feeds yesterday.
It’s really well done and I appreciate the underlying notion: rss feeds can feel like “work” to be done.
But I’ve always viewed them as a buffet from which I can sample. Not as a task list. A place to graze.
I have absolutely no desire to consume everything on the buffet. Yes, I have some things I’ll eat nearly every time. But in general, it’s a broad selection from which I can sample, depending on my mood. I have no obligation to eat it all, and in fact, that might be considered unreasonable.
The stuff I always put on my plate first is in one folder. The stuff I don’t eat that regularly goes into another folder, from which I only occasionally peak. I even have feeds from my friends' blogs that I never read, as they’re not on topics I care about, or are a bit too influencer-y for my tastes. But I’ll occasionally pop in to mark those as read, giving me a second or two to scan for a (rare) life update or something surprisingly interesting.
There’s simply too much to consume in the modern era to ever consider some grouping of content as a task list. If your default is to view that as such, I think you’re going to feel especially overwhelmed in the modern world.
I’m considering signing up for omg.lol almost entirely for the damn statuslog…
Are there any similar solutions I could use to quickly plant a status on my various sites? 🤔
Reposts from my Hey World blog
I reposted several posts from Hey World to my personal website.
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How to make driving across Texas more fun - a quick discussion of how a somewhat ridiculous new travel quest is making the boring parts of travel more fun.
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Friends for the sake of memories - re-examining some online friendships and choosing a path forward.
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I paid $100 for the privilege of travel today - taxing your own privilege.
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The last years of your life suck - a reminder of what your final years might look like.
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The only possible way to drive directly from Missouri to Kentucky - weird geography meets a weird quest.
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How can a digital camera from 1999 change your life? - purchases that change how you live.
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How many countries are there? - it’s more complicated than you might think.
Day 27: Surprise for challenges.micro.blog
This is Surprise Lake in Aniakchak National Monument, a collapsed caldera in remote Alaska that’s the least visited park unit in the country. I spent 5 days waiting for a short window to fly here via bush plane in 2019, so it’s a surprise that you made it!

Day 21 Mountains for challenges.micro.blog: “The Great One”
