Heroes of Roanoke doodles, via @the.gleest

The SALEMander
The Bear
The Hollow King
The Roanoke Ravager
Cowboy Cactus
Captain Hamilton’s ship
The Vinton Vulture (and family)
Fourth of July is heading our way!

Costumed Heroes… and Villains… Are Appearing Across the Roanoke Valley

At first, everyone thought it was just another internet rumor.

A blurry photo near the Roanoke Star.

A shadow on the Greenway.

A figure perched high above downtown just before dawn.

Then came the videos.

Now… people are asking if the Roanoke Valley has its own superheroes.

The first to capture the public’s imagination was The Roanoke Raven. Dressed in midnight black with a purple mask, witnesses claim the mysterious guardian has been spotted watching over downtown rooftops before disappearing into the night. Some say they’re protecting the city. Others insist they’re simply waiting.

Not long after came The SALEMander.

Equal parts firefighter, athlete, and neighborhood legend, the crimson-clad hero has reportedly been seen racing toward danger rather than away from it. House fire? Flooded street? Cat in a tree? No one can prove anything… but people keep telling remarkably similar stories.

Then, circling overhead (or at least somewhere high enough to judge us all) is The Vinton Vulture.

Despite the intimidating name, locals insist this masked mystery has a knack for finding what others have lost. Missing pets. Missing wallets. Missing hikers. If something disappears, don’t be surprised if a dark-winged figure quietly points rescuers in the right direction before vanishing without a word.

Unfortunately…

Heroes rarely appear without villains.

Reports have begun surfacing of The Hollow King, a ghostly figure said to emerge from abandoned places and forgotten tunnels beneath the valley. Wherever he walks, lights flicker, echoes linger, and people suddenly remember stories they’d rather forget. Some believe he’s more myth than man. Others refuse to go looking.

More concerning is the arrival of The Roanoke Ravager.

Unlike the others, the Ravager doesn’t hide. He wants to be seen.

Witnesses describe shattered signs, overturned park benches, mysterious claw marks, and a booming laugh echoing through the mountains. Every appearance seems designed to test the city’s newest protectors.

Coincidence?

Performance art?

An elaborate social media campaign?

Or something stranger?

Authorities have no official comment.

Local photographers are suddenly carrying better zoom lenses.

And somewhere beneath the glow of the Mill Mountain Star, heroes and villains may already be choosing sides.

If you happen to see a caped figure disappear over a rooftop…

Don’t panic.

Just wave.

They might be on your side.

World Cup Countries: Universal Healthcare Comparison

A breakdown of the 48 participating nations and their healthcare systems.

Healthcare Status Participating World Cup Countries Total

Universal Healthcare
Algeria, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Cabo Verde, Canada, Colombia, Congo DR, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Croatia, Czechia, Curaçao, Ecuador, Egypt, England, France, Germany, Ghana, Haiti, IR Iran, Iraq, Japan, Jordan, Korea Republic, Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Portugal, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Scotland, Senegal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Tunisia, Türkiye, Uruguay, Uzbekistan 47

No Universal System
United States 1

*Note: While structural approaches vary (including public, private, or mixed national insurance), 47 of the 48 qualified countries ensure a mandated, baseline access to medical care for their entire population.

Dandelion Wine – Ray Bradbury

What’s a piece of media (book, movie, song) that changed how you see the world?

Current Mood: 🌳 Grounded, but wistful.
Current Music: The wind chimes out on the porch.

It’s wild to think about how some things from your childhood just evaporate, while others embed themselves so deeply into your DNA that they become a part of how you process the entire world.

That book I read in school (the one that hooked a 13 year old kid sitting under buzzing fluorescent lights) isn’t just a core memory. It turned out to be a lifetime lease on a specific way of seeing.

Here I am, decades removed from that classroom, and my appreciation for Dandelion Wine has only grown heavier, richer, and honestly, a lot more necessary.

When you’re 13, the book feels like an adventure manual. It’s about the thrill of summer, the magic of new tennis shoes, and that first intoxicating shock of realizing you are alive. You read it with forward momentum, looking ahead at this massive expanse of life waiting to be lived.

But reading it now? As an adult who has to deal with the reality of time actually passing? It hits entirely differently.

Now, I don’t read it for the thrill of the future; I read it as a survival guide for the present. When the week has been nothing but screens, spreadsheets, and the numbing noise of the daily grind, Bradbury can still reliably snap me out of it. He reminds me that the world is still magical, even when it’s heavy.

“So if you close your eyes and fade away and whisper, you may go back through the years to the time when because you felt a thing was true, it was true.”

Yesterday, I was sitting on my porch watching a summer storm roll in. The sky turned that deep, bruised purple, the air got cold fast, and for a split second, I wasn’t thinking about my to-do list or my phone. I was just there. I felt that exact same spark of awareness I felt riding the bus home at 13.

Recent book club commentary that drives me bananas.

Here’s a minor collection of comments from our book club from the last couple of meetings that made my brain break.

Paraphrased, but pretty close:

“I don’t read anything but the dialogue parts.”

“Why would I read the prologue? That’s just author yap. Same for epilogues.”

“I don’t like stories that have a plot.”

“I literally never read a prologue on principle alone. If it’s that important, it should be in the book.”

Note: This isn’t everyone in the club, but maybe over half *never* read the prologue. That stunned me.

Only one of them was a “I only read dialogue.”

About three of them were anti-plot/story arcs and instead prefer characters that experience zero growth or change, and dislike a three-act story.

Some (but not most) won’t read if it isn’t in the first person.

When I was younger, I might skip a forward,  but the actual beginning and end of a book? Why on earth would you do that?

I was amazed at the replies I got from the “talker only” folks when I asked what they pictured the protagonists looking like or how they were feeling about the setting.

I guess everyone has things they like and don’t…it just amazes me that so many “readers” aren’t members of “the clean plate club.”

Ochre Jelly defeated by Green slime

“More than 160 troops contract flu at Texas base after Hegseth lifts vaccine order, saying the vaccines were ridiculous overreach.”

The US government leadership should not kneel to the wishes of the dumbest ding dongs on earth because they started that bus towards the cliff after cutting the brake lines.

But here we are since 2016. Death, injury all from a few morons listening to and scared of idiot voters not turning out.

He directly led to a million people in America dying during Covid.
Rapist.
Pedo.
Criminal.
Traitor.
Fraudster.
Bottom-feeding Mobster.
Con Man.

He doesn’t care about any of those awful acts. But the one thing getting to him personally is the Reflecting Pool debacle, and his anger and misery at that, if nothing else affects his hollow soul, is making me happy. It is making him so very deranged, upset, and irritated.

It’s why I will never tire of the Reflecting Pool dunks on him.

It even crashes like a car in a ps2 game

The image shows a Tesla Cybertruck that appears to have veered off the road and become lodged against a utility pole.The truck is angled sharply upward, with its front end near the ground and rear wheels suspended in the air.Emergency vehicle lights are visible on the road, suggesting a scene response is underway.

got this reply

This image appears to be a digital rendering or a scene from a video game, often associated with physics simulation software like BeamNG.drive.It depicts a black, polygonal vehicle tilted sharply on its nose on a wet asphalt road.A red truck is visible in the distance, suggesting a collision scenario.

So, my data was worth an additional $7.31 refund

I got my second part of class action suit against facebook. (Privacy leak)

A screenshot of a digital transaction notification showing a payment of $7.31 sent by “BMO Bank National Association.” The text below the amount reads, “Your Facebook Consumer Privacy User Profile L…”, indicating it is likely a class-action settlement payout. At the top, there is a circular dark blue icon containing the letters “BA”.

Just think, they spill my information,  and I get enough for a 6″ sub and a coke, four to nineteen years later. (In addition to them bankrolling the destruction of society)

Context– On October 10, 2023, following a hearing, the United States District Court for the Northern District of California issued an Order Granting Motion for Final Approval of Settlement, an Order Awarding Attorneys’ Fees, Expenses, and Service Awards and a Final Judgment. Objectors filed two Notices of Appeals which were resolved as of May 14, 2025, and on May 22, 2025 the Settlement became final. Pursuant to the Court’s Order dated August 27, 2025, the distribution of settlement benefits commenced in September 2025. The initial distribution of settlement benefits has been completed. On May 6, 2026, the Court issued an Order approving a second distribution. The second distribution is expected to commence in June 2026 and will continue for approximately four weeks.

Note: First refund was about $29 last September 2025.  This is the second in June of 2026. 

PSA to anybody getting a colonoscopy

Whoever TF wrote the instructions for prep did NOT pass basic English comprehension.The instructions say to mix an entire bottle of miralax with 2 bottles of gatorade (64 ounces).This can be interpreted 2 ways:Two 64 ounce bottles of gatorade OR 2 bottles of gatorade totaling 64 ounces.These are vastly different amounts of gatorade. My brain took it the first way and it wasnt until after had downed the first half and feel nauseous AF that I did the research and found out that standard prep is 64 total ounces of gatorade with that much miralax.So first problem, kroger doesnt sell 32 ounce bottles of gatorade. At most I found there was a 28 ounce bottle.2nd problem, is that all of this could have been avoided had they worded the prep letter properly. Mix 1 bottle of miralax with 64 ounces total Gatorade.Even if they left their original wording in they could have cleared it up in the part that says “starting at 4pm the day before, drink your first 32 ounces of gatorade…. yada yada”.

now, a friend says they got the opposite instructions. Ffs.

Welcome to my wall scrawls.