beatrice_otter: All true wealth is biological (Wealth)
[personal profile] beatrice_otter posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Vorkosigan
Pairings/Characters: Gregor Vorbarra, Ivan Vorpatril
Rating: Gen
Length: 7k
Creator Links: [archiveofourown.org profile] callmecasandra 
Theme: siblings, AU, fork in the road, family, gen, old fandoms, book fandoms

Summary: Gregor need not have worried.

Reccer's Notes: Gregor Vorbarra is Emperor of Barrayar, and he has monsters in his family tree. His father Serg was a rapist and a murderer who died when he was a small child (and Serg's own father Emperor Ezar arranged his death), and his great uncle was Mad Emperor Yuri who was paranoid and homicidal and awful. Gregor understandably has issues about his family.

But what if Ezar had seen the sort of person Serg was, and how many monsters are in the family tree, and not only made sure Serg died before inheriting the throne, but also ... made sure that Serg would not father the next emperor of Barrayar?

This is a short but compelling AU. The series is marked incomplete, but there are no dangling plot threads and it hasn't been updated in over a decade.

Fanwork Links: The Cuckoo
beatrice_otter: Luke and Leia on the Death Star (Luke and Leia)
[personal profile] beatrice_otter posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Star Wars
Pairings/Characters: Leia Organa
Rating: Gen
Length: 2k
Creator Links: [archiveofourown.org profile] Darkmagyk 
Theme: siblings, gen, family,

Summary: “We were very close.” Sola says, and Leia smiles her politician's smile in response.

This woman is convinced she and her sister were the best of friends. And she’s telling the secret daughter, from a secret marriage, all about it.

Leia doesn't need the force to know it wasn't true.

Reccer's Notes: This is about Padmé and her sister Sola, but it's also about Luke and Leia, and about family, and about memory.

Fanwork Links: Lonely In Your Company
beatrice_otter: Captain America (Captain America)
[personal profile] beatrice_otter posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Captain America
Characters/Pairings: Steve/Bucky
Rating: G
Length: 16,400 words
Creator Links: [profile] odsbodkins
Theme: Outside POV, siblings, female characters, gen, 

Summary: Becca Barnes is eight years old, and her big brother can do no wrong. The events of the two Captain America movies, from the perspective of one of the sisters Bucky leaves behind.

Reccer's Notes: This story has an excellent child's perspective, and a deep and abiding love between Becca and Bucky. It's lovely and it makes me cry.

Fanwork Links: My Brother, the Hero
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
https://transrightsreadathon.carrd.co/

March 17-31, 2026

The Trans Rights Readathon is an annual call to action to readers and book lovers in support of Trans Day of Visibility (TDOV) on March 31st.

We are calling on the reader community to read and uplift books written by and/or featuring trans, nonbinary, 2Spirit, and gender-nonconforming authors and characters.


As before, I would like to request that people shout out their favourite eligible books in the comments!
mific: (McShep Silhouette)
[personal profile] mific posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Stargate Atlantis
Characters/Pairings: John Sheppard/Rodney McKay, Jeannie Miller, Jack O'Neill
Rating: Explicit
Length: 23,191, 02:40:45
Content Notes: no AO3 warnings apply.
spoilery content noteRodney and John weren't raised as brothers, but they discover they are. After having fucked. This causes some angst for a while, and Rodney's rationalisations are amusing.

Creator Links: speranza on AO3, speranza's own site

Themes: Siblings, Action/adventure, Family, AU, AU - fork in the road

Summary: "Jean isn't your sister," Rodney said, speaking to John as if he was a small child. "Jean is my sister."
John's whole face changed. "What?"

Reccer's Notes: Written as a slightly cracky Harlequin fic, this is a favourite story of mine, full of action, adventure, and family complications. John and Rodney meet at Patrick Sheppard's funeral and afterwards happen on an alien artifact at his apartment. A wild ride ensues as they try to get it to Area 51. Rodney's a physicist and John's air force, but at the start, neither of them know about the Stargate program. There's lots of excellent drama, romance, and snark as they gradually discover all the secrets their parents hid from them.

Fanwork Links: Last Will and Testament on speranza's site, and on AO3
And I podficced the story

(no subject)

Mar. 16th, 2026 11:30 pm
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss


The Gorillaz fully hand drawn animated short film for their new album has been out for a minute, but it's still really cool.

I am the worst Gorillaz fan. I used to listen to their debut album on repeat back when I owned physical media. Some of their other songs were among my favorite songs, but I don't think I've like listened to anything by them except in passing in ages. Also, I know 0% of the lore. Every time someone tried to explain to me about the band not being real or what the character names are I was like "I'm sorry for you or glad that happened, whichever"

I need to listen to them more and actually note the titles of some of my favorite songs. I used to listen to them on mixes and didn't really know the titles, they just came in a certain rotation.

They've got a streaming channel up of their videos and live performances and seeing what the lead singer looks like was a surprise. Also, he really does sing into like a... what do you call it? It's like a CB radio handheld thingie. Like what a trucker talks into when talking to other truckers. Also, fuck, they have worked with an insane roster of talent over the years. Even Bad Bunny? Like, how did they snag so many hype collabs? Are the Gorillaz way bigger of a deal than I think they are?
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
By which I mean, hey one of my goalies is getting a beer!



I must acquire a six pack, and that will probably mean a day trip to Seattle, which I could probably use anyway

Also, do goalies also have hockey ass? )

Mother Nature is Drunk

Mar. 16th, 2026 11:15 pm
cornerofmadness: (Default)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness
It was 78 yesterday. Today my students freaked out and raced through lab because it was snowing its brains out. I wasn't going to go to water aerobics but my friend peer pressured me. We came out of that, wet headed, to 2 inches of snow on our cars. OMG

Water aerobics was good, weird but good. She doesn't use music. I've never done this without music. we were too busy laughing at each other anyhow. I'm the only one who had ever done water aerobics before. That pool was empty. It's also...awful. 20 years I've never been in there. it was closed the first five years I was here. I have always avoided it because I didn't want in the pool with students and it was always 'booked up' and another faculty member said no, it's always empty. it needs painted badly. It's a soulless structure but it is a pool.

Hope I won't be too sore tomorrow.

And it was a rough night. I woke up at 4 to an alarm. It was my dexcom. My sugar was at 51 and crashing out. Fun times.


Speaking of actual fun times, both of my panels, (my sabbatical research on the first lady doctors, and a panel on Victorian/Edwardian medicine) were accepted by the Gettysburg Steampunk festival. I'm very excited about this. I'm thinking of doing something for Tsubasacon as well

Another panel I'd like to offer up next year would be women of horror in the Victorian/Edwardian era (and maybe one of the same group for SF/F) and to that affect let me offer up for Women's History month not our dark queen Mary Shelley but rather Charlotte Riddell who wrote ghost stories that were also tied into social restrictions and social commentary. You can read more about her here.


It's music monday 30 weeks of music. This week's prompt is 17 A song that got you into this artist Share your faves too.

I'm sharing my first songs for several artists. Love to see yours )





here's the whole prompt list

It's under here )

tumblr

Mar. 16th, 2026 09:36 pm
umbo: (clark gregg smile)
[personal profile] umbo
Sure is some fuckery going on at tumblr today. Anyway, I'm still here, still alive, it's spring break and I have so far done nothing except write about 1K on my BuckTommy bang. And I have a ton of work I need to get done this week, alas.

Speaking of Lou Ferrigno Jr (who played Tommy on 911 and will hopefully do so again), did any of y'all see him on The Pitt this week? He absolutely stole the show as Park the Shark! So glad to see him getting recognition for it, too!

It would be good to have some LFJ icons here, if anyone still does that. Or BuckTommy ones. I'm not nearly as fond of Oliver Stark (who plays Buck) as I am of Lou, but he does a decent job with what the writers give him and had/has insane chemistry with Lou.
lannamichaels: Astronaut Dale Gardner holds up For Sale sign after EVA. (Default)
[personal profile] lannamichaels


Does anyone have or have access to the The Polychrome Historical Haggadah by Jacob Freedman? I'm curious as to what kind of hagadah text it has. I can find a write-up that lists the levels and one of them is Contemporary, defined as beginning in 1900. What's the contemporary stuff? Are there notable things this hagadah includes/doesn't include?

It having contemporary things/cup of Miriam/etc is not a downside, I just want to know what sort of thing is in this before I decide if I wanna get it for this year or not. My utmost value in a hagadah is "is this usable", not really "is this beautiful", and my "is this historically interesting" niche is already fulfilled by the hagadah shelaimah. So is this the sort of thing that would perfectly slot next to the hagadah shelaimah on the shelf, or is it more of a gimmick? The last hagadah I got because it was artistic, I ended up giving away, because it was pretty but not actually functional.

Books read, early March

Mar. 16th, 2026 08:50 pm
mrissa: (Default)
[personal profile] mrissa
 

Ruth Awad, Set to Music a Wildfire. A poetry collection that is very directly about her experiences as a daughter of a Lebanese immigrant and her father's experiences in Lebanon. Interesting but not particularly subtle; I'm not sure it's fair to demand subtlety on these topics.

M.H. Ayinde, A Song of Legends Lost. A thumping big fantasy. Did I read this because one of the characters is eating plantains very early on and I love plantains? Well. That wasn't the only reason. But the things it said about the worldbuilding drew me in and kept me going for many hundred pages.

Shane Bobrycki, The Crowd in the Early Middle Ages. Bobrycki noticed a gaping hole between the Roman Empire and the Renaissance when it came to the influence of large group behavior in Europe, and this book is him examining what we know about that, what crowds there actually were, what impact they had on the life of their cultures and why. He manages to remember that Europe does not just mean Italy at first and later France and England, which is always nice.

Eliane Boey, Club Contango. I really like Boey's prose, and this started out well for me, but as the narrative bore inexorably down on the plot twist and I could no longer pretend it would not be that particular plot twist--which I had foreseen at the very beginning and really hoped it would not be--I grew more and more frustrated. Here's hoping her next thing doesn't lean on a twist of that particular sort.

Sarah E. Bond, Strike: Labor, Unions, and Resistance in the Roman Empire. Bond is clear and explicit about where she's drawing parallels between modern unions and ancient groups that have similar traits, and she's willing to make her arguments about them specific rather than handwavey. A corrective for too much of the assumption that the people of the past were not like us, and an angle on the ancient world more interesting to me than most.

Michael Brown, The Wars of Scotland, 1214-1371. Definitely what it says on the tin, from the top-down perspective rather than anything about what these wars were like for the rank and file. Did you know the Scots were not a restful people in this era? welp.

Steph Cherrywell, The Ink Witch. I loved this so much. It's MG fantasy that's actually funny rather than adult-trying-too-hard, it's got ink magic and a tarantula familiar and a lovely fierce trans heroine whose plot is not about being trans, it's about magic quests and family politics and mermaids and yeti and running a little motel. It's so great, I'm so happy about this book.

P.F. Chisholm, A Taste of Witchcraft. At this point in this series (this is book 10, don't start here), we are no longer talking about an historical murder mystery series but more generally an historical adventure series. This one goes very, very vividly into the tortures accused witches suffered, so if you're not feeling up for that, maybe not this one. It also features quite a bit of my favorite characters in the series, though.

Sunyi Dean, The Girl With a Thousand Faces. Discussed elsewhere.

Nicola Griffith, She Is Here. A short collection of essays, poems, and short stories. Most of the essays were familiar to me from previous sources, but they go well here thematically. I love Griffith's novels, but her shorter work does not feel as strong or essential to me. For me this is a nice-to-have, not a must-have.

Bassem Khandaqji, A Mask the Color of the Sky. A novel about a young Palestinian man who has aspirations in both archaeology and fiction--who is writing a novel about Mary Magdalen, or trying to--who looks at the wider world and wants a wider life. And then he finds an ID that will allow him, with his particular appearance, to readily pass as a Jewish Israeli, and he does that for a while, and it's the sort of book where the complications are primarily internal, emotional, mental, about his place in the world and his identity, rather than thriller novel shooty-shoot complications. It's short and fairly straightforward.

Margrit Pernau, Emotions and Temporalities. Kindle. This is one of a series of short monographs that I downloaded a while ago, and it's the first where I've really felt that the format limited content beyond what was useful. I wanted a lot more context on emotionality and assessments of past/present/future in the cultures Pernau was discussing; I felt like more and longer examples would have strongly benefitted her argument. Ah well, I'm told you can't win them all.

Dana Simpson, Unicorn Secrets. This is the latest of a collection of daily strips of the comic Phoebe & Her Unicorn, which I don't read daily, I read them in collection form. It is nice and fun and nice. Is this the best of them, no, but it does what I wanted it to do, it is a pleasant diversion.

Dodie Smith, I Capture the Castle. Reread. So one of the things I didn't fully notice when I read this the first time, 25 years ago on a friend's futon waiting for another friend's wedding, is that this is an almost perfect balance of Victorian and modern novel. Specifically: money is allowed to be the main concern. Money is discussed in detail, what food you can get for it and what clothes and what marriage will do about it and how we feel about that. Marriage is still considered to be the main way that women handle money, but no longer the only way (and the ending makes that matter rather than blurring to a romantic "isn't it lovely that the marrying couple just happens to have enough funds after all?" that some of the other books both Victorian and modern fall back on). It is very matter-of-fact about sex and sexuality for its publication date, but not in a smarmy or overbalanced way. This is also one of fiction's non-evil stepmothers, and bless her for that.

D.E. Stevenson, Miss Buncle's Book. Kindle. A very gentle comedy about a spinster in a small village who writes a novel with keen observations of all her neighbors and sets the whole town on its ear. I'm fascinated by the line Stevenson manages to walk between letting the Great Depression feel real (Miss Buncle needs her book to make her money! it's not quite as money-focused as I Capture the Castle but still) and still keeping it upbeat for the people who were reading the book as an escape from that very same Great Depression. Not terribly deep, fairly predictable in its larger plot though not necessarily in its scene incidentals, fun all the same.

Ethan Tapper, How to Love a Forest: The Bittersweet Work of Tending a Changing World. I was a bit disappointed in this, which aims at being a lyrical memoir of a life in forestry. The lyricism is repetitive (which is harder to forgive considering how short this volume is) and in places twee (writing some sections about himself in the third person as "the man" did not work for me), and in general there was a great deal less how than I hoped for. He talked about what he was doing, he even talked in general terms about those who might not understand how killing plants could help a forest ecosystem. But as it was memoir rather than science essay, he felt no need to go into the evidence behind his positions--and, crucially, actions.

Jo Walton and Ada Palmer, Trace Elements: Conversations on the Project of Science Fiction and Fantasy. Discussed elsewhere.

silveradept: Domo-kun, wearing glass and a blue suit with a white shirt and red tie, sitting at a table. (Domokun Anchor)
[personal profile] silveradept
Let's begin with this: the fish doorbell is active again! See fish on the camera, push the button to have the keeper go and let them through.

A lovely profile on Diane Duane, who has been in fandom and making fandom and having her own fandom for many decades at this point.

Bruce Campbell, star of Evil Dead, Brisco County, Jr., Bubba Ho-Tep, and frequent guest star on Xena: Warrior Princess, among other roles, revealed a cancer diagnosis that was going to make his tour for a new movie come up short. Gods-cursed cancer. Here's hoping Bruce can beat it and the treatments are effective.

Permission to use more modern music in figure skating programs has meant an entire series of headaches to obtain copyright clearances to use the music, because skating has not yet worked out appropriate blanket licensing permissions, I guess, with all the relevant countries and possible artists. I'm interested as to why copyright holders and/or companies would reject the use of their music during skating programs or the Olympics, outside of "this person using this music is not someone we want associated with the music."

Because the United States is not a safe place to be, nor to try and enter and exit legally, the Ig Nobel Prizes have moved their award ceremony to Zurich, Switzerland. The Annals of Improbable Research have found something far too probable, about the way that U.S. immigration is treating everyone, so they went somewhere safer.

And speaking of ignoble people... )

Last for tonight, Black Africans are everywhere in history, including in places where the average studier has their focus pinned down to the whiter side of Europe, instead of the greater world Latin Christendom interacted with.

And a searchable database of ukiyo-e prints through several eras of Japanese carving and printmaking.

(Materials via [personal profile] adrian_turtle, [personal profile] azurelunatic, [personal profile] boxofdelights, [personal profile] cmcmck, [personal profile] conuly, [personal profile] cosmolinguist, [personal profile] elf, [personal profile] finch, [personal profile] firecat, [personal profile] jadelennox, [personal profile] jenett, [personal profile] jjhunter, [personal profile] kaberett, [personal profile] lilysea, [personal profile] oursin, [personal profile] rydra_wong, [personal profile] snowynight, [personal profile] sonia, [personal profile] the_future_modernes, [personal profile] thewayne, [personal profile] umadoshi, [personal profile] vass, the [community profile] meta_warehouse community, [community profile] little_details, and anyone else I've neglected to mention or who I suspect would rather not be on the list. If you want to know where I get the neat stuff, my reading list has most of it.)

(no subject)

Mar. 16th, 2026 05:02 pm
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
The Buffy reboot's been scrapped. Firefly and The Guild are coming back. Hopefully, the new X Files is on track.

I feel like we need some sort of franchise tracker to just dip in and look at things.

Firefly has not aged well. We'll see how this return goes, assuming it doesn't get last-minute scrapped like Buffy
melroseee: (the pitt - abbot)
[personal profile] melroseee
Was thinking hey what if I posted my vids here too???? Why not, right??

Title: dying for you
Fandom: The Pitt
Pairing: Robby/Abbot
Song: "Dying for You" by Charli xcx
 

第五年第六十五天

Mar. 17th, 2026 08:24 am
nnozomi: (Default)
[personal profile] nnozomi posting in [community profile] guardian_learning
部首
手 part 46
擦, to rub; 攀, to climb; 擤, to blow your nose (I have never seen this character in actual use but I like that it exists) pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=64

语法
3.13 把 with result and degree complements
https://www.digmandarin.com/hsk-3-grammar

词汇
动画片, cartoon; 动摇, to shake/to waver; 摆动, to swing; 电动车, electric car; 激动, excited; 移动, to move; 运动会, sports event; 运动员, athlete; 转动, to turn pinyin )
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-4-word-list/

Guardian:
车子和那个孕妇就擦肩而过, the car almost hit that pregnant lady
有本事你把我也杀了, kill me too if you think you're up to it
麻醉手表啊,就动画片里的那种, a paralyzing watch, like in the cartoons?

Me:
我没有攀过岩,太恐怖了。
你拍的视频手都抖,动摇得把我晕车了。

Currently: Fics, Finals & Forehands

Mar. 16th, 2026 11:20 pm
badfalcon: (SG-1)
[personal profile] badfalcon
I've just renewed my premium paid account, so I should probably start using this thing again 😂 So starting with a little check-in of what's been filling my brain lately: books, tennis, studying, and small bits of everyday joy.
 
📚 Reading:
I've somehow ended up with a whole bunch of books in progress again, and I'm attempting to work my way through them with varying levels of success. The main ones at the moment are Deadline, Loathe to Love You, and Mosaics and Magic. It's a slightly chaotic mix of vibes, but that does seem to be my natural reading state these days.
 
🎧 Listening To: 
A lot of old-school Good Charlotte lately. It's been a very nostalgic week - so many good memories of gigs and the general early-2000s pop-punk era.
 
📺 Watching: 
We just caught up on the latest season of Great Pottery Throwdown, and I was absolutely thrilled that my favourite potter won! It's such a comforting show - wholesome, creative, and occasionally emotional when someone's glaze finally works. And I cry every time Keith does!
 
🎾 Tennis: 
Jannik won Indian Wells! The statistics coming out of that run are genuinely ridiculous. He's now the youngest man to win all the North American hard court titles, the youngest to win all the hard court Masters, and the fastest to complete them - Djokovic took seven years, Federer took nine… Jannik did it in two. He's also the only player to have won two back-to-back Masters without dropping a set. Just absolutely absurd levels of tennis.
 
🖊 Writing: 
Mostly working on my essay about gender in early modern Europe at the moment. Fic has taken a bit of a back seat this year - I've barely written any - but I do really want to get back to it once my brain has a little more space again. The Priest AU is starting to wave at me again.
 
🏫 Studying: 
I'm very behind on my course right now and honestly pretty stressed about it. I have a two-week extension on my current essay, which is now due on Thursday. Once that's submitted, I'm planning to sit down and make a proper catch-up plan before the next assignment at the end of next month. One step at a time.
 
💭 Thinking About:
How to rebuild some kind of routine again. The last few months have been a bit all over the place, and I think my brain really needs some structure - even if it's just small, manageable blocks of reading, writing, and actual rest. I'm also settling into the new job and getting used to WFH full-time again. Naturally, I'll probably just find the perfect rhythm right before the contract ends in May.
 
📅 Planning:
This week is mostly about getting the essay finished and handed in, and then giving myself a little breathing room to figure out the next few weeks of study. I'm also quietly hoping I might find a bit of time to open a fic document again.
 
💖 Loving: 
Planner joy! I've found a bunch of stickers I really like and I feel like I've finally figured out my style. Now when I look at my planner it actually makes me want to use it, which feels like a small miracle. Every page looks a little creative, a little chaotic, and very made-with-love. planner picture under the cut )
[syndicated profile] lh_wayfarer_feed

Posted by Daniel Oropeza

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

Traditionally, spring hasn’t been a big online shopping season, comparatively speaking. Summer has Prime Day, fall has Prime Deal Days and Black Friday, and there are a bunch of holiday sales during winter. But that has been changing since Amazon's launched its Big Spring Sale three years ago. And this year, as usual, Target is competing for your dollars with its own spring promotion: Circle Deal Days.

What is Circle Deal Days?

Circle Deal Days is Target’s name for its spring sale event this year. In previous years, Target held Circle Week, which lasted a whole week (like Amazon's Big Spring Sale, which runs March 25–31). This year, it's much shorter.

When is Circle Deal Days?

This upcoming Circle Deal Days will be from Wednesday, March 25, to Friday, March 27.

Do you need to be a Target Circle member to shop for Circle Deal Days?

You will need to be a Circle member to take part in the sale, but unlike a Prime membership, membership in Target Circle is free. You can sign up on the Target app or Target.com. If you are part of the paid membership tier, Target Circle 360, which starts at $10.99 per month, you'll get early access beginning March 24. Target is also offering incentives for those who sign up for Circle or Circle 360 in the lead-up to the sale:

  • Join Target Circle between March 15 and 24 and get 15% off your first purchase.

  • Apply and get approved for a Target Circle credit card from March 15-27 and get $100 in Target Circle Rewards.

  • Sign up for Target Circle 360 March 15-27 will receive 50% off a one-year membership.

There are more details in Target's press release.

What deals you can expect during Target Circle Deal Days

The sale is mainly focused on spring items, but sale categories will broadly include apparel, patio furniture, home essentials, beauty products, grocery items, toys, books, movies, and music. You can shop in person or online, and there will be a "Deal of the Day" for every day of the event.

Here are some examples of deals you might find, directly from Target's press release:

  • Up to 50% off select toys from Barbie, Gigglescape, PAW Patrol and more

  • Up to 40% off women's apparel including A New Day, Universal Thread and AVA & VIV

  • 40% off select skincare from BYOMA, Bubble Skincare, Good Molecules, Vacation, Carroten and more

  • 40% off select home, kitchen and dining, including Keurig, Cuisinart and Ninja

  • 40% off select floorcare, including Shark, Dyson, Bissell, Roborock and Sharper Image

More deals are available on the Circle Deal Days landing page.

What competing retailers are also hosting spring sales?

Amazon’s Big Spring Sale will take place Wednesday, March 25, through Tuesday, March 31. Walmart hasn't confirmed its sale yet, while Best Buy's Tech Fest is running now through Sunday, March 22.

[syndicated profile] twocents_feed

Posted by Daniel Oropeza

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

Traditionally, spring hasn’t been a big online shopping season, comparatively speaking. Summer has Prime Day, fall has Prime Deal Days and Black Friday, and there are a bunch of holiday sales during winter. But that has been changing since Amazon's launched its Big Spring Sale three years ago. And this year, as usual, Target is competing for your dollars with its own spring promotion: Circle Deal Days.

What is Circle Deal Days?

Circle Deal Days is Target’s name for its spring sale event this year. In previous years, Target held Circle Week, which lasted a whole week (like Amazon's Big Spring Sale, which runs March 25–31). This year, it's much shorter.

When is Circle Deal Days?

This upcoming Circle Deal Days will be from Wednesday, March 25, to Friday, March 27.

Do you need to be a Target Circle member to shop for Circle Deal Days?

You will need to be a Circle member to take part in the sale, but unlike a Prime membership, membership in Target Circle is free. You can sign up on the Target app or Target.com. If you are part of the paid membership tier, Target Circle 360, which starts at $10.99 per month, you'll get early access beginning March 24. Target is also offering incentives for those who sign up for Circle or Circle 360 in the lead-up to the sale:

  • Join Target Circle between March 15 and 24 and get 15% off your first purchase.

  • Apply and get approved for a Target Circle credit card from March 15-27 and get $100 in Target Circle Rewards.

  • Sign up for Target Circle 360 March 15-27 will receive 50% off a one-year membership.

There are more details in Target's press release.

What deals you can expect during Target Circle Deal Days

The sale is mainly focused on spring items, but sale categories will broadly include apparel, patio furniture, home essentials, beauty products, grocery items, toys, books, movies, and music. You can shop in person or online, and there will be a "Deal of the Day" for every day of the event.

Here are some examples of deals you might find, directly from Target's press release:

  • Up to 50% off select toys from Barbie, Gigglescape, PAW Patrol and more

  • Up to 40% off women's apparel including A New Day, Universal Thread and AVA & VIV

  • 40% off select skincare from BYOMA, Bubble Skincare, Good Molecules, Vacation, Carroten and more

  • 40% off select home, kitchen and dining, including Keurig, Cuisinart and Ninja

  • 40% off select floorcare, including Shark, Dyson, Bissell, Roborock and Sharper Image

More deals are available on the Circle Deal Days landing page.

What competing retailers are also hosting spring sales?

Amazon’s Big Spring Sale will take place Wednesday, March 25, through Tuesday, March 31. Walmart hasn't confirmed its sale yet, while Best Buy's Tech Fest is running now through Sunday, March 22.

(no subject)

Mar. 16th, 2026 10:16 pm
beccaelizabeth: my Watcher tattoo in blue, plus Be in red Buffy style font (Default)
[personal profile] beccaelizabeth
Tumblr staff broke tumblr
by changing how reblogs and replies and comments and EVERYthing works
and as far as I can figure this may mean
tumblr staff can't see all of the reblogs that tell them they broke tumblr
unless they reblog directly from staff.
which is a level of broke that is Special.

Apparently it breaks blocking and breaks the ability to make things unreblogable.
people are still testing that but it sounds. bad.

tumblr not looking great right now.

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bientot

March 2011

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