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#Markian
lowpolyparrot · 2 years
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🐶🌻🐱
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True Justice: Family Ties - photo preview 1 of 2
(photos 1-2, 4, 7-14, and 16 are from parade.com)
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watchinghallmark · 4 months
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True Justice: Family Ties - January 12th on Hallmark Movies & Mysteries
A law school student and her friends, set out to prove her brother's innocence but the only way to clear his name is by finding the real killer. Stars Katherine McNamara, Markian Tarasiuk, Nikki DeLoach and Benjamin Ayres.
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Harvey with Andy Samberg and Markian Tarasiuk at the premiere of Comedy Central's Digman!
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whiteshipnightjar · 1 year
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These gorgeous peeps at the Digman! premiere
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toomuchlovereviews · 4 months
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Mistletoe Connection (2023)
⭐️⭐️⭐️
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I like a good meet-cute, okay? What’s cuter than bumping into a handsome businessman while being dressed as an elf? Plus, it is easier to like a Hallmark movie when the characters aren’t one-dimensional. I think Kate was a good choice as the main character because she had a bit of mischief in her eyes. Within the first ten minutes, she is sneaking past a secretary, traipsing into a meeting and demanding that she speak to the boss. Does this mischief stay through the entire film? No, which was a letdown.
Watch this if you:
enjoy a festive, romantic movie and can get past the Hallmark dialogue
need a MEET CUTE !!!!!
Similar titles:
Home Alone (1990) (whimsical and festive classic, very warm and fuzzy)
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kartoshinki · 1 year
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Absolute injustice how absurdly adorable hog piglets (shoats?) are
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Powered wheelchairs and Right to Repair
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Here’s a miserable story with a mostly happy ending, one that leaves us with work to do, sure, but also with clarity on what to do next and how to do it. It’s about Colorado’s HB22–1031, “Consumer Right To Repair Powered Wheelchairs,” which Governor Jared Polis signed into law last week:
https://leg.colorado.gov/bills/hb22-1031#:~:text=Concerning%20a%20requirement%20that%20a,repair%20the%20manufacturer%27s%20powered%20wheelchairs
Three million Americans rely on wheelchairs, and many of them use powered wheelchairs. A wheelchair is an amazing assistive device, one that can mean the difference between being stuck at home — or even in bed — and being able to work, go to school, shop, and see family and friends.
Even if you don’t use a powered wheelchair, it won’t surprise you to learn that they break. A lot. Anyone with a phone or a laptop — tech that travels with us out of the home, into the great and wild outdoors — knows that stuff you take with you into the world takes a lot of knocks.
But when it comes to powered wheelchairs, there are a lot of complicated — and frankly awful — structural factors that virtually guarantee that the chairs will get broken, and then getting them fixed is an incredible hassle. These structural factors are detailed in “Stranded,” the US Public Interest Research Group’s new report:
https://uspirgedfund.org/reports/usp/stranded
Stranded’s foundation is 141 interviews US wheelchair users about their experiences with wheelchairs, which informs its commercial and legal analysis of the structural problems that underpin those experiences.
The report explains how Medicare narrowly interprets its statutory duties, allowing it to exclude outdoor powered wheelchairs from its program. That means that the majority of Americans who rely on powered wheelchairs have to use indoor wheelchairs, even when outdoors.
No wonder that these chairs break. A lot. As Mark Schmeler from U Pitt told Markian Hawryluk from Kaiser Health News, “It’s like you’re outside walking around all day with your slippers on.”
https://khn.org/news/article/power-wheelchair-users-right-to-repair-law-no-easy-fix/
But it’s not just a problem of fragile indoor chairs in a rugged outdoor world. The chairs aren’t just indoor chairs, they’re bad indoor chairs. That’s down to Medicare’s policy of using nationwide low bidders to supply chairs, which produced a winner-take-all duopoly where two private equity-backed manufacturers dominate.
These two companies — Numotion and National Seating and Mobility — have presided over a decline in the quality and durability of chairs, which means that the chairs they make break more often. Because these are PE-backed rollups — companies that used private equity capital and debt leverage to buy all their competitors — they need very high margins to meet investor expectations and cover their debts. That has resulted in deep cuts to the companies’ service budgets.
Medicare also has a policy of not funding preventative maintenance and only replacing chairs every five years, which means that these fragile, undermaintained, badly made indoor chairs must last for half a decade. That’s why 93% of respondents to the PIRG survey reported broken chairs in the previous year.
But also, the duopoly — whose anticompetitive mergers were waved through by the FTC — refuses to invest in repair, which is why 62% of repairs take 4+ weeks, while 40% take 7+ weeks. That’s 7 weeks of being stuck in your home — or even in your bed — while you wait for a technician to get your chair running again. Many of the people interviewed for Stranded can’t wait, and continue to use broken chairs. Some of them were severely injured as a result.
Unsurprisingly, wheelchair users and their trusted technicians often end up fixing their own chairs. Fixing a flat tire — or even swapping the little skateboard wheel used to stabilize a chair with a heavy control unit and respirator — are not rocket science. Stranded quotes a wheelchair technician who works for the duopoly: “most repairs to wheelchairs are straightforward and don’t require specialized skills or training, just a familiarity with mechanical devices.”
But there are deep structural impediments to independent powered wheelchair repair, impediments that are familiar from other Right To Repair fights: parts, and DRM. As with mobile phones, tractors, cars, and appliances, parts for powered wheelchairs can be hard to source because the cartel that manufactures them refuses to make them available except to authorized technicians. As is the case with other repair monopolies — like Apple’s authorized independent repair program — technicians are not allowed to keep parts in inventory, which means that nearly every repair includes a lengthy delay while parts are ordered and shipped.
Beyond parts, there are the problems of Digital Rights Management (DRM) in the chairs’ electronics. As with GM cars, John Deere tractors, and Apple iPhones, access to these electronics is digitally restricted to authorized technicians with passwords and specialized hardware tokens. Under Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), making tools to bypass these access controls is a felony carrying a maximum penalty of 5 years in prison and a $500,000 fine:
https://doctorow.medium.com/about-those-kill-switched-ukrainian-tractors-bc93f471b9c8
That means that wheelchair users and independent technicians can’t access the diagnostic information from their own chairs, and when they swap in new components, they can’t access the configuration tools to get them working, including changing a chair’s grip parameters after changing to all-weather tires.
Powered wheelchair users need routine access to these electronics, just to tweak the settings of their chairs. For example, a wheelchair user who gains ability and confidence might want to change the delay settings for their control unit. One of the interview subjects in Stranded compares bad delay settings to “driving with bungee cords.” Without access to their electronics, wheelchair users are at the mercy of the under-resourced, delay-prone official technicians, and at the mercy of Medicare’s willingness to authorize payment for tuning this setting.
Now, finally, we come to Colorado’s HB221031, the new right to repair wheelchair laws. Like the model R2R laws that a coalition of monopolistic manufacturers have defeated time and again, in states across America, the law requires manufacturers to supply parts, manuals, and unlock codes to chair owners and independent technicians.
https://doctorow.medium.com/apples-cement-overshoes-329856288d13
Many of the commentators quoted in the KHN story and in Stranded make the point that making it easier to fix wheelchairs won’t solve all the other problems — a monopolized chair manufacturing market, Medicare policies on preventative maintenance, outdoor chairs, and replacements, etc. They’re right.
But this law will make it easier for wheelchair users to repair the chairs they rely on. It will free them from endless bureaucratic nightmares, from enforced immobility, from isolation from work and school and family and friends. It will remove a burden — a burden that impairs wheelchair users and their families from advocating for the structural fixes we need.
Right to repair laws have been defeated again and again in statehouses across America, thanks to the solidarity of monopolists, who have formed seemingly unbeatable coalitions devoted to ripping off their customers and destroying the planet with infinite mountains of e-waste.
But, as this bill shows, the anti-repair axis can be defeated. In Massachusetts, Bay Staters overwhelmingly voted in an automotive right to repair laws in a 2020 ballot measure. In New York, the governor just signed an unprecedented right to repair electronics law. And in Colorado, we have the first successful right to repair wheelchairs law.
These successes tell us what we need to do next: replicate New York’s electronics repair law, Massachusetts’ automotive repair law, and Colorado’s wheelchair repair law in other states. Go from strength to strength, victory to victory, shattering the anti-repair axis by picking off its members, one at a time.
All of this will create the political will and the political space for realizing the promise of the FTC’s landmark “Nixing the Fix” report:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/05/07/pro-act-class-war/#we-fixit
And Biden’s excellent executive order on Right to Repair:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/07/10/unnixing-the-fix/#r2r-plus-plus
The anti-repair axis’s lies — that only they can perform safe and effective repairs — grow thinner every day. The true motivation — extracting monopoly rents — grows more undeniable. As ever, rights for people with disability redound to all of us.
It’s not that we’re all merely “temporarily able-bodied” (as Liz Henry once memorably put it to me), either. Just as curb-cuts help people with strollers and bikes and grocery buggies, just as subtitles help language learners and people in noisy environments, protecting people with disabilities protects us all. That’s why the activism of people with disabilities is activism that benefits us all.
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/06/when-drm-comes-your-wheelchair
Image: Hugh D’Andrade for EFF https://www.eff.org/files/banner_library/wheelchair-drm-2b.png
CC BY US 3.0: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
[Image ID: EFF's remix of the wheelchair/disabled logo. The wheelchair user has been flipped to face left; they are holding an outsized open-ended wrench which they are using to tighten their own wheelchair's wheel. Around them is a decorative orange and yellow concentric circle motif.]
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lowpolyparrot · 2 years
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Animation update
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watchinghallmark · 1 year
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notfspurejam · 1 year
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gacmediadaily · 9 months
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Starring Donna Benedicto and Markian Tarasuik Premieres: Monday, August 14, 2023
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Title: Status Update
Rating: PG-13
Director: Scott Speer
Cast: Ross Lynch, Olivia Holt, Harvey Guillén, Gregg Sulkin, Courtney Eaton, Rob Riggle, John Michael Higgins, Wendi McLendon-Covey, Brec Bassinger, Osric Chau, Maude Green, Markian Tarasiuk
Release year: 2018
Genres: comedy, science fiction, romance, fantasy
Blurb: After being uprooted by his parents' separation and unable to fit into his new hometown, a teenager stumbles upon a magical app that causes his social media updates to come true.
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brookston · 2 years
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Holidays 8.9
Holidays
Battle of Gangut Day (Russia)
Betty Boop Day
Book Lovers Day [also 1st Saturday in Nov.]
Clean Out the Kitchen Cupboards Day
Cranham Feast (Gloucestershire, UK)
Dag der Inheemsen (Indigenous People’s Day; Suriname)
Defense Forces Day (Zimbabwe)
Festival for Sol (Ancient Rome)
Frank Zappa Day (Baltimore)
Indigenous People’s Day (Suriname)
International Art Appreciation Day
International Coworking Day
International Day of the World's Indigenous People (UN)
International Sundance (Lakota; Manitoba, Canada)
Jesse Owens Day
Laugh At Religion Day
Meyboom (Brussels and Leuven, Belgium)
Moment of Silence Day (Japan)
Nagasaki Day
National Book Lover's Day
National Hand Holding Day
National Polka Day
National Women's Day (South Africa)
Official Air Guitar Day (Kansas City, Missouri)
Quit India Day (India)
Rain of Mussels Day (Germany)
Send An E-mail Day
Smokey the Bear Day
Unicorn Day
Veep Day
Victory Day (Rhode Island) [2nd Monday]
World Baijiu Day
World Tribal Day (Parts of India)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Rice Pudding Day
2nd Tuesday in August
Fox Hill Day (Bahamas) [2nd Tuesday]
Independence Days
Singapore (from Malaysia, 1965)
Feast Days
Ashura, Day 2 (Islamic) [a.k.a. ... 
Ashoora (Parts of India)
Ashura (Bahrain, Bangladesh, Pakistan)
Muharram (Parts of India)
Muharrum (Bangladesh)
Yaum-e-Ashur (Pakistan)
Candida Maria of Jesus (Christian; Saint)
Edith Stein (a.k.a. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross; Christian; Saint)
Fedlimid (a.k.a. Felimy) of Kilmore (Christian; Saint)
Fénélon (Positivist; Saint)
Festival of Sol Indigis (Roman Sun God; Ancient Rome)
Firmus and Rusticus (Christian; Saint)
Herman of Alaska (Russian Orthodox Church and related congregations; Episcopal Church (USA))
Invisible Pixy Swatting Day (Pastafarian)
John Vianney (1950s – currently 8.4; Christian; Saint)
Mary Sumner (Church of England)
Nath Í of Achonry (Christian; Saint)
Remembrance for Radbod, King of the Frisians (Asatru/Norse Pagan/The Troth)
Romanus Ostiarius (Christian; Saint)
Rosencranz & Gilderstern Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Secundian, Marcellian and Verian (Christian; Saint)
Talk to the Invisible Pixies Day (Pastafarian)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lucky Day (Philippines) [44 of 71]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Premieres
The Abyss (Film; 1989)
Come September (Film; 1961)
Dizzy Dishes, featuring Betty Boop (Fleischer Cartoon; 1930
Escape from L.A. (Film; 1996)
Hot Fun in the Summertime, by Sly and the Family Stone (Song; 1969)
Lovelace (Film; 2013)
Outlander (TV Series; 2014)
Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure (Film; 1985)
Pil’s Adventures (Animated Film; 2022)
Ready! Steady! Go! (BBC TV Series; 1963) Reservation Dogs (TV Series; 2021)
Shooting Rubberbands at the Stars, by Edie Brickell & the New Bohemians (Album; 1988)
Walden, by Henry David Thoreau (Short Story; 1854)
XXX (Film; 2002)
Today’s Name Days
Edith (Austria)
Firmin, Roman, Terezija, Tvrtko (Croatia)
Roman (Czech Republic)
Rosmanus (Denmark)
Deboora, Imma, Melita, Mesike (Estonia)
Eira, Erja, Nadja (Finland)
Amour (France)
Altmann, Edith, Roman (Germany)
Triantafilia, Triantafilos Triantafyllos (Greece)
Emőd (Hungary)
Fermo, Maria, Romano, Rustico (Italy)
Ģedimins, Genoveva, Madara, Tautgodis (Latvia)
Mintartas, Rolandas, Romanas, Tarvilė (Lithuania)
Ronald, Ronny (Norway)
Jan, Klarysa, Miłorad, Roland, Roman, Romuald (Poland)
Ľubomíra (Slovakia)
Román, Teresa (Spain)
Roland (Sweden)
Mark, Markian (Ukraine)
Felim, Ledell, Phelan, Phelim, Phelps (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 221 of 2022; 144 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of week 32 of 2022
Celtic Tree Calendar: Coll (Hazel) [Day 4 of 28]
Chinese: Month 7 (Lányuè), Day 12 (Jia-Wu)
Chinese Year of the: Tiger (until January 22, 2023)
Hebrew: 12 Av 5782
Islamic: 11 Muharram 1444
J Cal: 11 Hasa; Threesday [11 of 30]
Julian: 27 July 2022
Moon: 91% Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 25 Dante (8th Month) [Fénélon]
Runic Half Month: Thorn (Defense) [Day 14 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 50 of 90)
Zodiac: Leo (Day 18 of 31)
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gebo4482 · 2 years
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Surface — Official Trailer | Apple TV+
Star: Gugu Mbatha-Raw / Christin Park / Markian Tarasiuk
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