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The list changing from three weeks ago makes me think I should note what's there now, for when it gets better or worse. So...

White Christmas
FTA (documentary)
Earthquake
Jaws
The Great Waldo Pepper
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Midway
Rocky
Hitler: A Career (documentary)
Slap Shot
Jaws 2
The Deer Hunter
The Wiz
The Jerk
Richard Pryor Live In Concert (Standup)
Monty Python's Life of Brian
Rocky II
The Electric Horseman
Fast Times at Ridgemont High
Conan the Barbarian
Rocky III
Dune
The Karate Kid
Rocky IV
The Breakfast Club
Ferris Bueller's Day Off
The Karate Kid Part II
Stand By Me
The Money Pit
Adam: His Song Continues
Dragnet
Jaws: the Revenge
The Secret of my Success
Strange Voices
Quiet Victory
A Stoning in Fulham County
Too Young the Hero
Midnight Run
Hard Lessons
Coming to America
Uncle Buck
The Very Best of Monty Python's Flying Circus
The Ryan White Story
Steel Magnolias
The Karate Kid Part III
Field of Dreams
Heartstopper
Unspeakable Acts
Rocky V
In Defense of a Married Man
Out of Life
Hook
Victim of Beauty
Triumph of the Heart
A League of Their Own
Reservoir Dogs
In the Line of Fire
Sankofa
Cliffhanger
Groundhog Day
Sinbad: Afros & Bellbottoms (Standup)
Clear and Present Danger
Leon
Legends of the Fall
Heavy
Jumanji
Heat
Kicking and Screaming
Sinbad: Son of a Preacher Man (Standup)
Matilda
The Cable Guy
Sinbad: Nothin' But the Funk (Standup)
Donnie Brasco
Liar Liar
Titanic
Starship Troopers
The Devil's Own
The Negotiator
Vampires
Monty Python Live at Aspen
One Last Shot
Jerry Seinfeld Live on Broadway (Standup)
The Last Days (documentary)
Blue Streak
Girl Interrupted
Stuart Little

I count 85 English-language movies now that I've gone through them more carefully, rather than just skimming the list. That's all Netflix carries for 1902-1999.

Plus another 68 movies not in English. Some of which are really good! But I'm trying to avoid being tricked by Netflix "stuffing" their numbers by loading a back-catalog of Hindi movies to offset their ever-dwindling collection of English-language movies.

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Perhaps you don't care about movies from the early 1900s, and if you wanted to dig into film history, you'd use something other than Netflix. Okay, good luck with that, but it's a fair point that not everybody cares about movies made before 1954.

How many movies do you suppose Netflix carries from before 2000?

Wednesday, August 30, 2023, I checked and found 149. I remember noting that the run of Airport movies were there, starting with the Burt Lancaster original "Airport" in 1970, but also "Airport 1975," "Airport '77," and "The Concorde: Airport '79." None of those are there now, though, and yet the total number of movies from 1900-1999 is now 153.

justwatch.com/us/provider/netf

Of those 153 movies, roughly 61 are not in English, most in Hindi, but also a few others. That leaves roughly 92 English-language movies from prior to 2000, from White Christmas to Stuart Little. That's it!

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Inasmuch as the index at JustWatch is accurate, it paints a dire picture of the movie library at Netflix. The fact that Netflix makes it incredibly difficult to navigate their library based on things like release date makes it hard to confirm this, and it's hard to come away thinking that navigation choice isn't deliberate.

The oldest movie Netflix currently features seems to be "White Christmas," from 1954. In fact, that seems to be their only movie older than 1962.

justwatch.com/us/provider/netf

Is that accurate? How could we be sure? Clicking on the names of the actors in that movie doesn't pull up any other movies, even though Bing Crosby was in more than 100. That's suggestive.

In 1962, a second movie appears! Its original title is "प्रोफ़ेसर", but in English it translates to "Professor." Then in 1966 we get "आम्रपाली" and in 1969 we get "Prince," another Hindi movie. If you're looking for something in English, your second choice is a 1972 documentary called "FTA," about Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland's opposition to the Vietnam War and the titular Army engaged in it.

1954, 1972, and then in 1974 we get the disaster movie "Earthquake." Finally in 1975 we get "Jaws," a Robert Redford movie, and "Monty Python and the Holy Grail." Three whole movies! From a year which IMDB reports had 3,682 movies, although that admittedly include a lot of non-English films.

imdb.com/search/keyword/?ref_=

Back when I got red envelopes mailed to my house, I could watch basically any movie ever made, or at least any movie released on DVD, and I am sure I watched more than three movies made before 1975.

JustWatch believes that the Netflix movie library currently has 3,916 movies, which is quite a comedown from what Marketwatch once described as "4,335 in March 2016 and 6,494 in March 2014." Still, it's higher than when I checked JustWatch in May of 2021, which reported 3,622 movies then.

We're paying more and more for less and less. Companies are pulling movies and shows from streaming to abuse tax law, and we have no legal recourse. This isn't the fault of Netflix, or at least not Netflix alone, but it's badly broken.

@OutOnTheMoors
It reminded me of this one in my neighbourhood:
Title: Mono
Location: Lavapiés, Madrid
Artist: Okuda & Bordalo II

#streetart
Title: Half Baby Beaver
Location: Bernex, Switzerland
Artist: Bordalo II (Portugal)

Macau seems like Las Vegas, but smaller, cleaner, and slightly more Chinese.

It’s my first time visiting Taiwan, and I really, really like it! Normally when traveling, the more unfamiliar things are, the better, but maybe the US-style electricity and very similar driving are subtly signaling familiarity to me.

Tainan and Taichung so far, Taipei tomorrow. Everything has been great.

I don’t know who needs to hear this but if the batteries die in your electric toothbrush, it’s still a toothbrush

"We've learned how to fight abuse. It's a solvable problem. We just have to stop repeating the same myths as excuses not to fix things."

Still relevant seven years later. From @anildash via @jkottke

medium.com/humane-tech/the-imm

I realized today that neither of my cars have the ability to play CDs.

The EV era and the CD era apparently do not overlap.

Sure, "generative AI" image models are all the rage, but don't sleep on slightly-older-fashioned FaceApp de-aging, aging, and re-gendering.

This is what I looked like, will look like, and would have looked like, apparently.

Every night, I pick up a medium soda from a local chain convenience store*. I do this at night because, well, that's when I have time to leave the house. But I don't want to drink soda at night, caffeinated as it is. So each night I pick up the next day's soda.

Since I'm not planning to drink it until the next day, I don't bother inserting a straw, which is how I've come to notice something odd.

The manufacturing tolerance on plastic lids is pretty tight. So tight, in fact, that if I just slap a lid down on a cup full of soda and carry it to my car, the jostling and release of bubbles often pushes up on the lid so much that soda leaks out of the side of the cup.

But wait, what about the hole in the lid? Shouldn't the gas escape through the hole in the lid, rather than pushing up and creating a dome? It turns out that when I don't insert a straw, there is no hole in the lid. There are two cuts in the lid, making an X or + into which a straw may be inserted, but if I don't insert a straw, those cuts are basically sealed tight, tighter than the edges of the cup, for example.

I've started to use a fingernail to bend up one of the corners of the straw cut-out, just to let a very small amount of gas escape, so I still have bubbly soda the next day.

Some other time I'll talk about why I have had as many as four (4) medium sodas in the fridge overnight.

* I said "pick up," not "buy." Despite owning only electric cars, I visit a gas station every day. The incentive program at RaceTrac is incredibly effective. Over time I built up enough points that I get a free medium soda or slushee (or a small coffee) every single day. Of course, I go every day, because why not? And since I'm there every day, sometimes I also buy roller grill items (America's equivalent of Asia's street food), and sometimes candy. So RaceTrac is giving away a lot of soda--which costs them very little--and managing to keep me as a customer, despite the fact that I will never again need to buy their main product. Pretty impressive!

Judith Love Cohen was the engineer who made Apollo's Abort Guidance System, which was crucial to saving the ill-fated Apollo 13. She finished it while in labor, then (the same day) delivered her younger son -- the actor Jack Black.

This is one of those utterly remarkable #space stories that I stumble over once in a while and it blows my mind afresh every single time.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judith_L

On mastodon, I have felt strangely free to post when I think I have something to say, and remain a silent observer when I don't. This might come as a surprise to some, who wonder why I think I had to say *that*, or *this other thing*, but that's life.

For whatever record anybody is keeping, I support people. I believe in people. LGBTQIA+ people, straight people, people of different ethnic backgrounds, people who believe in different things or nothing, people. I support people living their own lives, making their own choices, loving or not loving whom they wish.

I support anybody willing to to support the same people I do, while allowing people to opt out. Some people opt out by pursuing trans-exclusionary views, or anti-immigrant views, or views that involve the superiority of one ethnic groups and inferiority of others. Believing any of that nonsense is opting out of the amazing wonder of a pluralistic modern society. It's siding with the bad guys, and nobody should want to be like a nazi, or a confederate, or any other historical losers who also thought they should treat others badly.

Be a winner! Don't just tolerate people, support people! Love people!

USA the last 1 week:
•Black teen shot for ringing a doorbell
•Two teen girls shot for sitting in a car
•A 7 mo pregnant woman & her unborn child were shot at a Walgreens
•20-year-old woman shot dead for turning into a driveway
•Four young people shot dead at a birthday party

Imagine thinking the solution is even MORE guns.😐
#GunReformNOW

A Japanese man rides his bike carrying Soba noodles on his shoulder in Tokyo, 1935. Colourised by u/vorst17735
#MadeMeSmile

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