balioc:

Holiday Engineering: What Not to Do

We can learn a lot from Chanukah, because Chanukah is a garbage-tier holiday.

I mean this in a mostly-detached, mostly-analytic way. Like many people who were raised Jewish, I have some very fond and happy memories of Chanukah. Anything can accrue fond and happy memories, if you have a way of getting people to do it. But Chanukah is full of features that actively detract from its being resonant, impressive, memorable, or fun. It is an anti-advertisement for its community.

If you’re a would-be designer-of-holidays, this is actually a really useful thing. Mimicking the good and successful holidays is quite hard; their quality tends to hinge on a lot of idiosyncratic hard-to-replicate factors, and “invent something as cool and punchy as the $WHATEVER” can be a tall order. But it’s easy to look at a design failure and say, “I”m not going to do that.”

With that, let’s go into the details:

Keep reading

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CHANUKAH: THE GOOD

  • Timing. It’s a midwinter festival-of-lights. Solid start. Everyone loves those. Brightness and festival cheer, in the long cold winter nights, is practically a need for many. The holiday mostly skates by just on being the winter light festival for the Jews. A+. Or, really, we should knock that down to an A, because Chanukah usually comes too early to be ideal for this purpose, but – still, quite good.
  • Traditional food (side dishes).Latkes are incredibly popular, and for excellent reason. If you’re trying to settle on a food that everyone will love, “fried potatoes” is a damn good choice.

CHANUKAH: THE NEUTRAL

  • Symbols. There’s really just one that matters: the chanukiyah (nine-branched menorah). Which is, on paper, a very cool and snappy symbol. Distinctive silhouette, ritual engagement, plus the allure of fire. But it loses a lot of points for the fact that you don’t actually light the whole damn thing, and get the proper visual effect, until the very end of a long-ass holiday when everyone’s enthusiasm and attention have ebbed. On the first night, in particular, you light just two candles in your chanukiyah, and it looks lopsided and sad.
  • Traditional food (sweets). Jelly donuts are fine, I guess, if uninspiring and uninspired. Chanukah gelt is pretty lame as candy goes…but from a holiday-design perspective, it’s hard to go too far wrong with giving kids candy.
  • Music. “Maoz Tzur” is kinda pretty. “Oy Chanukah!” is kinda fun. That’s pretty much it, barring some silly kids’ music (and I guess that Adam Sandler thing). Nothing that will knock anyone’s socks off. But, honestly, two decent songs is more than many good holidays have.
  • Gifts.Being the big annual gifting holiday is a double-edged sword. It’s some super-powerful mojo, culturally speaking. People are obsessed with giving and receiving gifts, in a way that’s very hard to excise or evade, no matter how often you trot out your utilitarian language about deadweight loss. Chanukah gets a lot of its traction out of the fact that it’s the holiday where you get presents. But. (a) In the modern world, the gifting holiday is unavoidably a locus of stress and misery for many people, and Chanukah doesn’t have nearly enough upside serving to support that burden. (b) Chanukah is bad at being a gifting holiday. The gifting is not well-integrated into the event, it’s a tacked-on thing copied over from Christmas, and it shows. There’s no real ritual surrounding it, no presents-under-the-Christmas-tree equivalent, certainly no Santa Claus. Worse yet, the eight-day-holiday thing means that either you need a set of gifts whose awesomeness is equally divisible by eight (mega-awkward), or else you have inconsistencies and disappointments.

CHANUKAH: THE BAD

  • Theme. What is the holiday about, when everything is said and done? What is our key takeaway message from all the shit we’re doing. “God is great, God looks out for His people, God performs mighty miracles.” Stop. Shut up. You fail. That’s every holiday, if you’re operating within a religious tradition. You need something more than that, something powerful and deep and important and special, to be even halfway-decent as a holiday. But for the vast majority of Jews (including Jews in the most orthodox and observant denominations), that’s pretty much all you get. Because…
  • Mythology. The story of Chanukah, the holiday’s narrative raison d’etre, is just unconscionably bad. In some extremely vague sense, it’s a story about Jews overthrowing foreign oppressors and casting off foreign influences…which is already pretty bad from a modern liberal perspective, we don’t like jingoistic ethnonationalism these days. But the actual events of the Chanukah story are less about Jews-against-foreigners than they are about Jews-against-other-Jews. It is a story about fanatics seizing power and murdering cosmopolitans. Virtually everyone hates that shit, up to and including the most tribal-minded Jews. The rabbis of the Talmud were pretty iffy about Chanukah for exactly this reason, and didn’t talk about it much, with the result that the holiday doesn’t have much in the way of supporting cultural infrastructure. And you really can’t tell the Chanukah myth without that horrible stuff; it’s so baked-in that it gets incorporated into even the most sanitized propagandistic Hebrew-school versions of the tale (with exactly the effects that you’d expect on Hebrew school students). The miracle of the oil feels like a tacked-on narrative coda, because it is, because without it the only possible moral of the story would be “kill your neighbor if he’s not pious enough for you.” But it’s much too little, much too late. The miracle of the oil is super lame by miracle standards: no one is saved from danger, there are no memorable SFX, the whole thing is relevant only to the rituals of a long-vanished Temple.

[There are several lessons that can be learned from this particular problem, at multiple levels of abstraction.]

  • Structure. You can have a good eight-day holiday, but a festival of that length needs an arc. The days need to be distinct from each other. You need to be either building up to a climax, or – more commonly, as with Passover and [the twelve days of] Christmas – coming down from a main celebration at the beginning in a long pleasant haze of semi-special time. Chanukah is flat and internally undifferentiated, except for the addition of more candles to the chanukiyah. You can’t sustain real holiday feeling that long, and there’s no particular day on which you’re supposed to do anything special, so it all just turns into a mush of “how much do we care right this moment?”
  • Activities. The traditional dreidel game is the worst, most boring, most unbalanced game in the history of games. Pushing it on children only makes those children hate Chanukah, and Judaism, and games, and you.
  • Traditional food (entrees). There’s no classic Chanukah dish that can serve as a viable main course, unless you’re one of those people who can happily eat fried potatoes as an entire meal. This is a glaring omission. It’s particularly bad for Chanukah, because Chanukah has so little else going for it that it really needs to lean hard on the standard holiday “gather for a festive meal” thing.
  • Social role. As many people will eagerly tell you, Chanukah was a pretty minor holiday for most of Jewish history; it got big largely because of a marketing push in the 19th and 20th centuries, mostly because people got scared about the prospect of the younger generations assimilating, and wanted to give them a holiday to compete with Christmas. Which is maybe the worst idea that anyone has ever had. For more reasons that I can easily list here, modern Western Christmas is an absolute SSS-tier holiday, one of the very best of all time. Setting yourself up as a direct competitor to Christmas – inviting your own people to make that comparison – is tantamount to telling them that your traditions and your community are worthless and weak, and that they should join the ranks of the gentiles. And that would be true even if your own offering were something halfway decent. Trying to do it with Chanukah…it’s like Estonia declaring war on the US. It’s the ultimate “we have food at home.” It is, if you’ll pardon my saying so, Christian rock.

Tags:

#this is an anti-Maccabee blog #(also latkes are weirdly bad) #(you’re right that it *should* be hard to fuck up fried potatoes) #(and yet) #Judaism #Hanukkah #meta #this probably deserves some warning tag but I am not sure what #discourse cw? #this post was queued because my to-reblog list is too long and I didn’t want to dump it on you all at once

what-even-is-thiss:

airborneranger63:

One time my rabbi told us, “imagine you had a box with a little bit of god in it. What would you do with the box?”

So we were like ?? “We’d protect it and keep it nice and clean and polished” and he was like “your body’s that box. Stop eating markers”

Every time I come across this post the last sentence smacks me in the face


Tags:

#anything that makes me laugh this much deserves a reblog #Judaism #this probably deserves some warning tag but I am not sure what #poison cw? #this post was queued because my to-reblog list is too long and I didn’t want to dump it on you all at once

baejax-the-great:

Somewhere out there on a planet very far away is a civilization that has included our sun in a beloved constellation of some animal we couldn’t dream up if we tried


Tags:

#aliens #this probably deserves some warning tag but I am not sure what #this post was queued because my to-reblog list is too long and I didn’t want to dump it on you all at once

batshit-auspol:

Trying to find an old post we searched the word ‘blood’, which caused Tumblr to deploy a therapy bot that said it can’t provide qualified support and instead tried to put us in a groupchat with a bunch of other people who had searched for blood so we could work through our feelings

This really is the pdf of websites


Tags:

#anything that makes me laugh this much deserves a reblog #Tumblr: a User’s Guide #(sort of) #this probably deserves some warning tag but I am not sure what #embarrassment squick? #this post was queued because my to-reblog list is too long and I didn’t want to dump it on you all at once

hotvampireadjacent:

hotvampireadjacent:

Doing some research into ‘praise kink’

b0c968e1f8aacad38ba476849da3408912cf5de6

Findings suggest maybe I am a good boy


Tags:

#anything that makes me laugh this much deserves a reblog #sexuality and lack thereof #this probably deserves some warning tag but I am not sure what #nsfw text? #this post was queued because my to-reblog list is too long and I didn’t want to dump it on you all at once

lucineblue:

lastoneout:

Ya know when people told me “when you’re finally safe enough that you can leave survival mode and start to let go of and process your c-ptsd/trauma things are probably going to get really, really bad before they slowly start to get better” I thought that was reasonable. I did not understand that by “things are going to get bad” they meant “you’re going to find yourself in the worst mental state of your entire life, but dw, that means it’s working” and tbh I simply wish someone had been more clear.

2619cdef47055cfd8a8e3fb068bb7bf3d8cbb9ea

Not letting these stay in the tags, damn.

Let yourself be Goop.


Tags:

#I’m not looking forward to it #this probably deserves some warning tag but I am not sure what #this post was queued because my to-reblog list is too long and I didn’t want to dump it on you all at once

knittingserpent:

mysticorset:

our-queer-experience:

ea89bb6ff1bd874232f19698f5aaca46ae0077e7

Alleviating gender dysphoria, not with binding or packing, but a secret third thing (padding your waist and ribs until they are the same size as your breasts)

4d82114a27f8ee6328fb6e53d53e12b6cfc33fb5

I’m sorry but this comment is sending me


Tags:

#gender #anything that makes me laugh this much deserves a reblog #this probably deserves some warning tag but I am not sure what #this post was queued because my to-reblog list is too long and I didn’t want to dump it on you all at once

{{previous post in sequence}}


official-german-translationen:

Salvete, Gaius Iuli’us Caesar sum et pilorum album quam nivem habeo et aureos, sed interdum virides lauros et imperium Romanum construxi et eius eram quasi primus Caesar (sic merui nomen meum) et multi indicant mihi me Marcus Crassus similem esse (si non scitis Marcus Crassus, vobis opus est pecunia). Brutus non est filius meus quod est bonum nam ET TU, MI FILI???!?. Iamia sum sed dentes albos et rectos habeo. Pallidam cutem habeo. Etiam, maga sum magicum ludum, nomine Pigverruca, visitans quod desinam (ego sum MMCXIV), veni, vidi, vici. Classicus sum (si vos id non suspexistis) et multas togas emptas in Basilica Iulia habeo. Ratio amo et bellum Gallicum gero. Veluti, hodie omnia Gallia occupata. Omnia Gallia? Certe! Non est vicus parvus inter Aquarium, Babaorum, Laudanum et Brevisbonum. Ambulabam foris Pigverruca. Ninxit et pluvit et Gallia divisa erat in partes tres, quod me fecit felix. Marcus Porcius Cato me observavit. Digitum medium illo monstravi.

diehellarache:

#I hate that I know what this is

maryellencarter:

7fd971737058cf577d970c36f4602728e5efa7e5

(via @publicdomainbooksdevotee )

My Latin is pretty rusty, but I know enough to say that it’s a bunch funnier, so let me take a stab at translating. I’m breaking down the original so if I make any ridiculous mistakes through not having taken Latin in 15+ years, other people can correct me.

“Salvete, Gaius Iuli’us Caesar sum” – Greetings, all! I am Gaius Julius Caesar

“et pilorum album quam nivem habeo et aureos,” – and I have spears that are whiter than snow and golden

“sed interdum virides lauros” – but sometimes green laurels

“et imperium Romanum construxi” – and I built the Roman empire

“et eius eram quasi primus Caesar (sic merui nomen meum)” – and I was, like, its first Caesar (that’s how I got my name) [note: a more literal translation is “thus I earned my name”, but it’s obvious that this is a direct reference to the line “that’s how I got my name” in the original]

“et multi indicant mihi me Marcus Crassus similem esse (si non scitis Marcus Crassus, vobis opus est pecunia).” – and many people say to me that I seem to be like Marcus Crassus (if you don’t know Marcus Crassus, your work is money). [translator’s note: “your work is money” is not a phrase I’m familiar with. Google Translate suggests “you need money” as a more idiomatic translation. My best guess is it might mean something like “you work for your money instead of being a patrician with a family inheritance”.]

“Brutus non est filius meus quod est bonum nam ET TU, MI FILI???!?.” – Brutus is not my son, which is good because AND YOU, MY SON???!? [note: this is the more classically attested version of Caesar’s last words, famously quoted in English as “et tu, Brute?” or “and you [are killing me too], Brutus?”

“Iamia sum sed dentes albos et rectos habeo.” – I am a [vampire?] but I have white and straight teeth. [note: I’m more familiar with the Lamia as a Greek female monster similar to Scylla but with only one neck. However, Google Translate’s suggestion of “vampire” seems likely accurate from the obvious context.]

“Pallidam cutem habeo.” – I have pale skin.

“Etiam, maga sum magicum ludum, nomine Pigverruca, visitans quod desinam (ego sum MMCXIV), veni, vidi, vici.” – Also, I am a female witch [at?] a magic school, named Hogwarts, which I will stop visiting (I am 2094), I came, I saw, I conquered.“ [note: “Veni, vidi, vici” is famously what Caesar said when deciding to bring his army to Rome and become its ruler.]

“Classicus sum (si vos id non suspexistis) et multas togas emptas in Basilica Iulia habeo.” – I am classical (if you didn’t know) and I have bought many togas in the Julian Basilica.

“Ratio amo et bellum Gallicum gero.” – I love reason and I conduct the Gallic [French] wars.

“Veluti, hodie omnia Gallia occupata. Omnia Gallia? Certe!” – As if, today all Gaul is occupied. All Gaul? Definitely!

“Non est vicus parvus inter Aquarium, Babaorum, Laudanum et Brevisbonum.” – It is not a small village between Aquarium [pun: fish tank], Babaorum [pun: rum cake], Laudanum [pun: opium product] and Short Good.

“Ambulabam foris Pigverruca.” – I was walking outside Hogwarts.

“Ninxit et pluvit et Gallia divisa erat in partes tres, quod me fecit felix.” – It snowed and rained and Gaul was divided into three parts, which made me happy. [note: Caesar’s history of the Gallic Wars famously begins “Gaul is divided into three parts”.]

“Marcus Porcius Cato me observavit. Digitum medium illo monstravi.” – Marcus Porcius Cato [the Younger, a famous opponent of Caesar’s ambitions] stared at me. I put my middle finger up at him.“

pedanther:

Additional context:

The year is 50 B.C. All Gaul is occupied by the Romans. All? No! One small village of indomitable Gauls still holds out against the invaders. And life is not easy for the Roman legionaries who garrison the fortified camps of Babaorum, Aquarium, Laudanum and Petibonum…

(introductory spiel to every volume of Astérix)

#UGH #this is an ATTACK and we (Tumblr) kind of deserve it #pretty sure ‘pilorum’ is ‘hairs’ (gen. pl. of pilus) instead of ‘spears’ (pilum) but this way is funnier #and either one would be ‘pilorum’ anyway so WHO CAN SAY (comparativelysuperlative)


Tags:

#okay so this one is closer to 8 business *months* (2023-05-14) #I don’t think any of the others are nearly so old though #My Immortal #language #oh look an update #this probably deserves some warning tag but I am not sure what #this post was queued because my to-reblog list is too long and I didn’t want to dump it on you all at once

spiralingintocontrol:

ladiesloveduranduran:

ladiesloveduranduran:

I had a lot of fun with my Boston poll so I’m making a new random poll.

You must live in one of these US cities. You make $65k a year. Where are you living?

us-city-choice-game-poll

Please put your justifications in the tags. Yes you have to live in the US in this hypothetical I’m sorry. Maybe if there is a demand I will run another poll with world cities.

Results so far are interesting. Based on the notes, it seems that there is a large faction who is overly concerned with how far $65k would go (the Sioux Falls camp) and a large faction who has given absolutely no thought to the cost of living (the Santa Barbara camp)

Asheville is great but I hear it’s gotten really expensive, not sure 65k would be enough


Tags:

#immediately discarding California and Florida for being incredibly prone to natural disasters #Texas and Louisiana also pretty bad on that front #skimming the Baltimore Wikipedia article is…not…dissuading me…from my prior vague impression of Baltimore as #being constantly on the edge of civil war #Sioux Falls vs Asheville is a tough one #I voted Sioux Falls #–largely because (looking at the Wikipedia climate chart) it kind of creeps me out the way Asheville doesn’t really ”have” a ”winter” #(does that mean the air is never breathable? always one pollen or leaf mold or another? I rather suspect it does) #(not to mention rhythms being important and all that)– #but further information could sway me #(under what circumstances are you allowed to leave?) #((the phrasing implies that it’s *not* just ”you can move away whenever you want‚ but you lose the magically protected income”)) #(if in twenty years North Carolina is a climate-changed hellscape of heat waves and mosquito-borne plagues‚ can you flee?) #((I acknowledge the concerns in the notes regarding South Dakota’s reproductive rights‚ but #I figure sneaking off somewhere to get your tubes tied *doesn’t* count as moving away)) #((hmm‚ though come to think of it I *have* heard the Great Plains are pretty agoraphobic‚ so there’s also that issue)) #home of the brave #surveys #tag rambles #this probably deserves some warning tag but I am not sure what #apocalypse cw?