* I've finally gotten used to reading at length on a tablet - specifically my cheapo Lenovo 10.6 inch model that I've had for a year - and I see now that you can pick one up for $80 less than when I bought it. (Now costs $247.) The thing that has made a small but significant difference was downloading books in .epub format and reading them on the Google Play Books app. (I've previously only tried reading .pdf format books on various .pdf reader apps - it was OK, but the Play Books app with an .epub book just works so well, especially if reading a book full of footnotes.) And a 10.6 inch screen tablet is just the right weight and size for single page reading. I've never been interested in a Kindle due to the inadequate screen size.
* So, what have I been reading? I finished the (admittedly short) book on Pure Land Buddhism; had a quick scan through "No Self - No Problem" (about neuroscience "confirming" Buddhist ideas of "no self") but it felt a bit dated, even though it is only from 2018; and have been reading large slabs of "Nietzsche and Buddhist Philosophy" - which was found via a question to an AI search engine which took me to a forum on Buddhism and someone who recommended it. It is pretty interesting, to be honest, despite my long term scepticism of paying much attention to Nietzsche's ramblings.
* There are various threads from this recent reading (and Youtube viewing) swirling around my brain, and I feel the need to try to "pin down" some of it by compiling a long essay/post for it to fit together. But there's always a distraction around the corner. This sense of stumbling around towards an important key insight has only been going on for about 40 years, though, so obviously I don't believe in hurrying such things! (It also reminds me a bit about reading Philip K Dick's VALIS trilogy back in the 1980's - was some insight that all made sense of Life, the Universe and Everything about to be revealed? Not really, as it turned out, but the possibility of it was part of the fun...)
* As for other things I did over the Christmas/New Year break - nothing much, as the weather here was storms (mostly) only interrupted by a couple of days of debilitating heatwave (37 or 38 degrees with high humidity.) Fortunately, my part of Brisbane didn't get significant damage, although some suburbs not too far away did (from storm wind, mainly.) I feel very sorry for the residents of Mount Tamborine, which is a very pretty part of the world but has suffered the worst destruction from which it looks likely to take many months to recover.
* The most enjoyable thing I watched on Netflix over the break - don't laugh, but it was the Puss in Boots - The Last Wish. This entry in the Shrek universe, so to speak, got very good reviews at the time, and it really is well written and surprisingly mature in theme. (I see someone called it a "meditation on the inevitability of death" - which I suppose it is, as told by fairy tale characters who end up feeling more "real" than most recent superhero characters!)
* Summer breaks are about the only time I watch any bits of quiz shows on TV, and I have to say that I don't understand how The Chase has lasted this long. It certainly must be cheap to make, given that the impression from my occasional viewing is that they must only have to pay anything to a contestant once every year (or two?) I don't understand the appeal of a show in which the chances of winning seem so remote.
And as for the other puzzling quiz show - I have been meaning to say ever since it began last year that the advertisements for "The 1% Club" on channel 7 are pretty remarkable because of the way the host (a comedian, apparently) comes across as an old fashioned jerk with dated material. (A lot about bad marriages, and general put downs that feel like slightly warmed over insult comedy of the Don Rickles variety.) Surely this won't work, I thought. Yet to my great surprise, I see from the latest advertisements that the show is a ratings hit, and it seems they aren't lying. Now that I look into it more, I see that in fact the Daily Mail ran a story when the show first started about the host being derided on social media as having no charisma. (For once I agree with that august journal.) Yet people are watching it.
Maybe it's me - I've never enjoyed "serious" quiz shows, really (the ones with contestants playing for money); but it still seems to me that they have become worse as the decades progress. (I last derided one in 2016 - the truly pointless and dull Pointless.)
And now when I Google the recent shows, I see a common theme - they are all Australia versions of shows originating in England. Ah well, that fits in with the general degradation of all cultural content coming out of that country over the last 30 or 40 years.