Sidenote, once tickets go up for sale for the area (I do see some theaters NOT in my area are selling them), if there’s anyone planning to see Le Mouvement Finale in Syracuse, feel free to hit me up and we can maybe see about meeting up? I have no idea if I have any mutuals or followers in the area, but hey, why not see?

I’M SCREAMING ABOUT THE LE MOUVEMENT FINALE SCREENINGS BUT ALSO NONE OF THE THEATERS HAVE TIMES LISTED AGGGG I WANT TO BUY TICKETS RIGHT NOW

But also my poor wife if I take them, the R Movie was very nice to them like, here’s a little bit about our 5/6 main characters, we included a little backstory short to give you context, here’s the dude’s gay alien lover, and here’s a simple and easy to follow plot

While the musical is gonna be like HERE’S OUR 13+ MAIN CHARACTERS THEY ARE SINGING AND DANCING AND HERE’S A WHOLE GROUP OF VILLAINS CHAOS LIVES NOT IN YOUR HEART BUT ON THE STAGE

I PROMISE not to blog too much about Barnes and Noble, but there’s a piece to it that I don’t know if people are thinking about.

If BN goes out of business, which it absolutely will at this point, Amazon has a near monopoly on the US book market. (Yes, other stores will still sell books, but they don’t compete in the same way)

So, going back to when BN was the corporate baddie putting indy stores out of business, they had lower prices than they do now. The member savings were bigger, discounts went deeper, all to get business. And then you know what happened? Once they didn’t have to compete, prices rose.

What do you think will happen to Amazon’s book prices when they have no major US competitor?

Now, the most likely course if that they’ll eventually sell most books at list price, and that’s not a terrible thing. (I am not the sort that thinks list price is too high, except in the case of certain hard covers when they’re shoddily made.) But what we should be concerned about is if there’s one large corporate buyer of books, they could influence list price in the long run. 

My point is, Amazon will not likely continue taking a loss on books once BN is out of the way, and one way or another, the market is going to change to reflect that.

The entirely unnecessary demise of Barnes & Noble

audreyii-fic:

“Whether the Andrea Gail rolls,
pitch-poles, or gets driven down, she winds up, one way or another, in a
position from which she cannot recover. Among marine architects this is known
as the zero-moment point – the point of no return.” –Sebastian Junger, “The
Perfect Storm”

Posts like this aren’t my usual fare, but there’s a lot of
readers on Tumblr. So y’all might be interested – or, if not, you really should
be.

On Monday, this went down:

image
image

That’s the bloodless, matter-of-fact, ho-hum business event
way of describing it. Let me paint you a different picture.

On Monday morning, every single Barnes & Noble location –
that’s 781 stores – told their full-time employees to pack up and leave. The
eliminated positions were as follows: the head cashiers (those are the people
responsible for handling the money), the receiving managers (the people
responsible for bringing in product and making sure it goes where it should),
the digital leads (the people responsible for solving Nook problems), the newsstand
leads (the people responsible for distributing the magazines), and the bargain
leads (the people responsible for keeping up the massive discount sections). A
few of the larger stores were able to spare their head cashiers and their
receiving managers, but not many.

Just about everyone lost between 3 and 7 employees. The
unofficial numbers put the total around 1,800 people.

People.

image
image

We’re not talking post-holiday culling of seasonal workers.
This was the Red Wedding. Every person laid off was a full-time
employee
. These were people for whom Barnes & Noble was a career.
Most of them had given 5, 10, 20 years to the company. In most cases it was
their sole source of income.

There was no warning.

But it gets worse.

Keep reading

For Valentines Rei leaves Mina a sticky note that says “Valentines Day is just a corporate invention to monetize personal relationships so I will not be participating. Love, Rei”

And Mina can’t help but grin because the inclusion of Love means Rei’s starting to crack on it for her

tw:suicide, mental illness, etc. Big personal post, but for those concerned the tw is not about me, just feelings about someone else’s stuff with that.

So. There’s a thing that I very hard to say, but I’ve been
told to talk about.

I don’t want to
talk about it. It’s this whole big thing, it’s complicated, it’s too simple, and
it’s just too much. I like keeping it to myself. Or maybe I don’t but—what else
is there?

I don’t know how
to talk about it.

What do I say? “How are you, Sam?” “Well, aside from the fact
that my wife has been outside in my car for four hours because they’re not safe
if I leave them at home, I’m fine.” “What did you do this weekend?” “I spent
eight hours in a mental hospital waiting to see if they were gonna take my wife
as inpatient. But they decided that an intensive outpatient program would be
more helpful, so then we got Chipotle!”

My in-laws keep offering to talk to me, but I know I’d just
get frustrated with them. We come at it from different angles, see—they had a
baby way back and they expected that baby to be healthy, and a frightening few
years later the baby started telling them it wanted to die. I met someone in a
bar and on the way back to their place, they mentioned being bipolar. I thought
it was fine because it didn’t matter, I was trying the whole one-night stand
thing, but then I gave them my number and then my heart and then my hand in
marriage, so it mattered a lot. But I knew what I was getting into. The nights
they still lived on campus and I rushed onto late night trains to get to them
and keep them that little bit safer weren’t unexpected. The days when they can’t
eat or only sleep or need to forgo all plans and get out of the apartment aren’t
either. Even going to the hospital this weekend was something I knew I’d
probably have to do sometime, I was just grateful they self-admitted. I’ve
known since very early on what loving them means.

I don’t think I can talk to my in-laws, because I don’t
think they’ll understand that. They’ve been concerned about me since Saturday,
when we went in. My mother-in law texted me that she knows it’s scary, and it
was, but it also wasn’t. Not knowing what might happen is scary, but god, being
there meant for a little while, I knew what wasn’t
happening. And to me, when there is a thing to do, I do it. It’s a simple,
maybe stupid philosophy, but it gets me through. It wards off despair. I have
to do the thing before I give in, and doing the thing usually gets me past
whatever it is. Waiting with my wife to see doctors, waiting while they saw
doctors, that was something to do about the whole thing.

I guess that’s part of why I don’t talk about it. Once they’re
past the moments of danger, once I’ve done whatever thing I can to keep them
safe or distracted or whatever it is I can figure out to do, I don’t need to
talk about it. Like, right now, they’re fine.
We joke that the hospital food made them realize they really didn’t want
to be there. Their mood is good, they’re planning on being here a while again—why
would I talk about the bad stuff now?

But I know I should, because it’ll all happen again. Not the
hospital, necessarily, though that’s likely too. The fear, though, that’ll come
back. The fear is the worst part. I don’t know how long I have with them. They
haven’t had any attempts since meeting me, but their last was only a few months
before that. Some days, I’m cocky enough to think I’ll make the difference. Not
that I’ll fix them, cure them, however you want to say it, but that I can be
there enough and be attentive enough and just give them at least one reason to
put it off one more day, every day. Other days, I know it’s not possible, not
every time. And I don’t know how to deal with that. It’s a big and craggy fear,
I’ve thought the whole thing through so many times it makes me sick. I feel
like I shouldn’t think about it, I want to be the person who refuses, who won’t
let the thoughts go that far because she refuses to let it happen, but god, I
can’t stop the whole thing from playing out sometimes. And you know, it’s
funny, because you know what I know I’d do?

Not talk about it.

That’s another part of why I don’t walk about this—if something
did happen, I could just. Omit the whole thing. Never mention it to anyone. Without
this context, if someone said “Sam, weren’t you married?” I could say I didn’t
want to talk about it, and they’d assume a messy divorce or an unrelated
accident, something else, anything else. It wouldn’t be that I loved someone so
much and it wasn’t enough to keep them here. That could be my secret.