I was at two conferences in one week, so that impinged upon my culture-consumed time.
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tv
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tv
- finished watching S2 of One Day at a Time on Netflix --I agree that it ended in a good place, but I'm glad it's getting a 3rd season
- finished watching S2 of Jessica Jones on Netflix -- as predicted, the last few episodes did not improve the season
- watched the "San Junipero" episode of Black Mirror on Netflix (episode 3.04)
- started watching The Good Place (I've watched the first 11 episodes -- through 1.11 What's My Motivation)
- Juana Inés (7-episode Mexican mini-series, acquired by Netflix) [I was curious to learn more about her after reading the one English lanuage picturebook that exists and in Googling I found a BookRiot article from last year "What to Read if You Loved Juana Inés on Netflix" -- so of course then I had to look up the mini-series]
- 22 kids' books -- mostly working through the backlog of all the books I'd ILLed the previous month and hadn't gotten to
- I loved The Rabbit Listened by Cori Doerrfeld
- the much-hyped Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi
- Habibi: A Muslim Love Story Anthology eds. Hadeel al-Massari & Nyala Ali
- Bipolar Faith: A Black Woman's Journey with Depression and Faith by Monica A. Coleman
- volume 5 of the 2016 runs of Wonder Woman and Black Panther *shrug*
- nonfiction from #SITD18: Toward a Theology of Psychological Disorder by Marcia Webb and Imaging and Imagining Illness: Becoming Whole in a Broken Body by Devan Stahl et al.
- Heather Mae and Crys Matthews concert
- You Can Be Brave (documentary, rough cut, seen at #SITD18)
- one more episode of the Mabel audio drama (now through Episode Twenty-Three: Bull in the Maze)
- The last week of June I finally started getting caught up on University of Alberta's Coursera Indigenous Canada (which I had gotten behind on that month) and am now through Module 10 (so I'm now only 1 week behind).
The module on Indigenous Women critiques colonialist heteropatriarchy generally, and includes an interview with Billy-Ray Belcourt -- who I then looked up, which led to me watching Gallstones and the Colonial Politics of the Future | Billy-Ray Belcourt | TEDxUAlberta [2016]
This then led me to other TEDx talks: ( 9 of them, to be exact )