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What is a 'Particularly Dangerous Situation' red flag warning and other wildfire terms


Here's a guide to understanding "particularly dangerous situation" red flag warnings, containment, and other terms related to the devastating fires that have left much of the LA area in ruins.

#news #npr #publicradio #usa
posted by pod_feeder_v2




I’m trying out the Metatext app (iOS) to read Mastodon feeds: not bad at all! Also nice: I had no trouble adding a Friendica account to it. So I can switch between them. Nice…
in reply to nukleos

Thank you for the recommendation. I should check that app out!



Deleted a couple of posts that, upon rereading, came off as passive-aggressive.




Big day for the fediverse


Major news in the #fediverse: #Mastodon becomes a non-profit ; and Instagram replacement #pixelfed , which is seeing a big surge in membership as people flee Meta, launches mobile apps.

And while we're on the subject, let me point to Loops, a fediverse alternative to TikTok which is just now getting off the ground.

Helen Jojo Blackforest reshared this.

in reply to leastaction

I tried to join gram.social but the email confirmation didn't come in for a long while and then it didn't work. I requested another one. Maybe things are funky because of the influx.


Hello Friendica!


Hello everyone. Seems that Facebook maybe going the same way as Twitter, so it looks like time to explore alternatives. So here I am.


@Ruud I know posting publicly works because of the engagement I have on those posts, even from other Friendica servers. But it appears that anything I've posted with "Limited" visibility to just "Followers" or "Friends" cannot be seen by my contacts in those Circles, even if they're on this same server. They should be able to see them but have told me, via other platforms, that they can't. They can only see my public posts.

On FB I mostly post with limited scope rather than publicly, I'd like to do the same here, but this doesn't seem to be working. Everything I've posted has a little hourglass icon on it with a tooltip that reads "Notifier task is pending" so are my "Limited/Private" posts just getting lost in the process queue?

@Ruud
in reply to Kristi H.

They probably are still in the queue... I'm still working with the Friendica developers to get this issue resolved github.com/friendica/friendica…
The queue is going down, but too slow, it would take 30 days for it to go to 0, so this needs to be fixed soon!


Test.

Wo erscheint dieser Beitrag denn nun? 🤔

in reply to ruedi

Guten Morgen,
überall - auf allen Diensten, die im Fediverse miteinander verbunden sind.


My kitties


First post. My Halloween kitty combo. Bela on the right, Boris on the left. They're litter mates and turned two in September of '24. I'm rather fond of them. :)
in reply to hogmomma

hogmomma tagged hogmomma's status with #cats


My kitties


First post. My Halloween kitty combo. Bela on the right, Boris on the left. They're litter mates and turned two in September of '24. I'm rather fond of them. :)



#cats
in reply to hogmomma

hogmomma tagged hogmomma's status with #halloweenkittycombo


My kitties


First post. My Halloween kitty combo. Bela on the right, Boris on the left. They're litter mates and turned two in September of '24. I'm rather fond of them. :)





Hi all


First post so my timeline is not all empty.


in reply to CSGiles

Welcome. Trying out the alternatives is always a smart thing to do.












in reply to Jessica Pennell

And people wonder why I'm so against AI, it's a pernicious threat to our collective intelligence and even our perception of reality. AI arrests the need to think, to question, to study, to create and that makes for obedient if clueless worker drones.



Wallace Shawn’s hands would often tremble as he walked onto the set of "The Princess Bride" (1987). It wasn’t the challenge of delivering Vizzini’s complex, fast-paced lines that unsettled him it was the paralyzing fear that, at any moment, director Rob Reiner would decide he was the wrong choice for the role. This fear wasn’t abstract. Shawn was well aware that he hadn’t been the first choice for the character of the self-proclaimed genius Vizzini. Danny DeVito, a towering name in comedy at the time, had been Reiner’s original pick. While scheduling conflicts had taken DeVito out of the running, Shawn felt like an impostor who had lucked into a role meant for someone else.
Shawn’s anxiety wasn’t baseless in his mind. He viewed DeVito as a giant of comedic timing and larger-than-life energy, someone whose every movement commanded attention. Shawn, by contrast, had built his career on intellectual, understated humor in films like "My Dinner with Andre" (1981). He was deeply self-critical, believing his quieter, more cerebral style was entirely unsuited to the flamboyant, arrogant nature of Vizzini. Every take on set was overshadowed by the nagging thought that his performance lacked the boldness the character demanded.
During the filming of the now-legendary "Battle of Wits" scene, Shawn’s insecurities reached their peak. In this pivotal moment, Vizzini engages Westley (played by Cary Elwes) in a duel of logic over poisoned goblets. The scene, layered with rapid dialogue and comedic absurdity, required Shawn to deliver a near-operatic performance, alternating between smug superiority and flustered frustration. While the crew laughed at his pitch-perfect delivery of "Inconceivable!" and his frantic attempts to outsmart Westley, Shawn remained convinced he wasn’t funny enough. He later revealed that he spent much of the scene preoccupied with thoughts of DeVito in his place, imagining the crowd laughing harder and the scene landing better.
What Shawn didn’t realize was how his very fear was shaping his performance in extraordinary ways. Vizzini, after all, is a character who masks deep insecurity with bluster and bravado. Shawn’s real-life unease brought an authenticity to the role that even Reiner hadn’t expected. His voice, with its distinct nasal quality, became an instrument of comedic precision, capturing Vizzini’s arrogance and fragility in equal measure. Every exaggerated hand gesture, every strained attempt at sounding confident, carried a subtle vulnerability that elevated the character beyond mere parody.
Co-stars like Cary Elwes and Mandy Patinkin observed Shawn’s anxiety on set but admired his commitment. Elwes later described how Shawn’s internal struggle mirrored the intensity of the story itself, making his scenes electric. Reiner, meanwhile, never once doubted his casting decision. He saw in Shawn a unique energy that no other actor could replicate. DeVito may have brought a louder, more physical comedy to the role, but Shawn’s version of Vizzini became something more layered a study in the comedy of overcompensation.
Years later, Shawn admitted that his fear of being replaced never fully left him during filming. But it’s this very fear that transformed Vizzini into one of the most iconic characters in "The Princess Bride." The tension between arrogance and self-doubt became the heart of the performance, making Vizzini not just a comedic foil but an unforgettable part of cinematic history.