spikedluv: jessica at typewriter (msw: jessica at typewriter by sarajayech)
This will most likely be the final fic I post in 2025. Which is coincidental, because the first fic I posted in 2024 was not only my first Murder, She Wrote fic, but also the fic that precedes this one. I hope you enjoy this!


Title: Charitable Deduction
Author: Spikedluv
Fandom: Murder, She Wrote (tv)/Hudson & Rex (tv)
Rating: PG13/Gen(/Het)
Pairing/Characters: Jessica Fletcher & Rex & Charlie Hudson/Sarah Truong
Length: 4,100 words
Spoilers: Takes place during early seasons of Murder, She Wrote and around season six of Hudson & Rex.
Summary: Charlie, Sarah and Rex visit Cabot Cove when a woman Jessica helped arrest in St. John’s escapes police custody. Jessica is more concerned for the safety of her niece, Beatrice, than her own. And naturally, another dead body turns up.
Author’s Notes: Written for [community profile] smallfandomfest for the prompt: Murder, She Wrote (tv)/Hudson & Rex (tv), Jessica & Rex & Charlie & or / Sarah, Charlie and Sarah visit Cabot Cove. This fic takes place some time after Charity Ends With Murder, though it’s not necessary to read that one in order to understand this one. Title is just me playing with the ‘charity’ theme.
Feedback: Would be greatly appreciated.
Disclaimer: None of these characters belong to me.
Posted: December 30, 2025

Read Fic @ AO3: https://archiveofourown.org/works/76715911

Posted by Katherine J. Wu

For all of the political chaos that American science endured in 2025, aspects of this country’s research enterprise made it through somewhat … okay. The Trump administration terminated billions of dollars in research grants; judges intervened to help reinstate thousands of those contracts. The administration threatened to cut funding to a number of universities; several have struck deals that preserved that money. After the White House proposed slashing the National Institutes of Health’s $48 billion budget, Congress pledged to maintain it. And although some researchers have left the country, far more have remained. Despite these disruptions, many researchers will also remember 2025 as the year when personalized gene therapy helped treat a six-month-old baby, or when the Vera C. Rubin Observatory released its first glimpse of the star-studded night sky.

Science did lose out this year, though, in ways that researchers are still struggling to tabulate. Some of those losses are straightforward: Since the beginning of 2025, “all, or nearly all, federal agencies that supported research in some way have decreased the size of their research footprint,” Scott Delaney, an epidemiologist who has been tracking the federal funding cuts to science, told me. Less funding means less science can be done and fewer discoveries will be made. The deeper cut may be to the trust researchers had in the federal government as a stable partner in the pursuit of knowledge. This means the country’s appetite for bold exploration, which the compact between science and government supported for decades, may be gone, too—leaving in its place more timid, short-term thinking.

In an email, Andrew Nixon, the deputy assistant secretary for media relations at the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the NIH, disputed that assertion, writing, “The Biden administration politicized NIH funding through DEI-driven agendas; this administration is restoring rigor, merit, and public trust by prioritizing evidence-based research with real health impact while continuing to support early-career scientists.”

Science has always required creativity—people asking and pursuing questions in ways that have never been attempted before, in the hope that some of that work might produce something new. At its most dramatic, the results can be transformative: In the early 1900s, the Wright brothers drew inspiration from birds’ flight mechanics to launch their first airplanes; more recently, scientists have found ways to genetically engineer a person’s own immune cells to kill off cancer. Even in more routine discoveries, nothing quite matches the excitement of being the first to capture a piece of reality. I remember, as a graduate student, cloning my first bacterial mutant while trying to understand a gene important for growth. I knew that the microscopic creature I had built would never yield a drug or save a life. But in the brief moment in which I plucked a colony from an agar plate and swirled it into a warm, sugar-rich broth, I held a form of life that had never existed before—and that I had made in pursuit of a question that, as far as I knew, no one else had asked.

Pursuing scientific creativity can be resource intensive, requiring large teams of researchers to spend millions of dollars across decades to investigate complex questions. Up until very recently, the federal government was eager to underwrite that process. Since the end of the Second World War, it has poured money into basic research, establishing a kind of social contract with scientists, of funds in exchange for innovation. Support from the government “allowed the free play of scientific genius,” Nancy Tomes, a historian of medicine at Stony Brook University, told me.

The investment has paid dividends. One oft-cited statistic puts the success of scientific funding in economic terms: Every dollar invested in research and development in the United States is estimated to return at least $5. Another points to the fact that more than 99 percent of the drugs approved by the FDA from 2010 to 2019 were at least partly supported by NIH funds. These things are true—but they also obscure the years or even decades of meandering and experimentation that scientists must take to reach those results. CRISPR gene-editing technology began as basic research into the structure of bacterial genomes; the discovery of GLP-1 weight-loss drugs depended on scientists in the late ’70s and ’80s tinkering with fish cells. The Trump administration has defunded research with more obvious near-term goals—work on mRNA vaccines to combat the next flu pandemic, for instance—but also science that expands knowledge that we don’t yet have an application for (if one even exists). It has also proposed major cuts to NASA that could doom an already troubled mission to return brand-new mineral samples from the surface of Mars, which might have told us more about life in this universe, or nothing much at all.

Outside of the most obvious effects of grant terminations—salary cuts, forced layoffs, halted studies—the Trump administration’s attacks on science have limited the horizons that scientists in the U.S. are looking toward. The administration has made clear that it no longer intends to sponsor research into certain subjects, including transgender health and HIV. Even researchers who haven’t had grants terminated this year or who work on less politically volatile subjects are struggling to conceptualize their scientific futures, as canceled grant-review meetings and lists of banned words hamper the normal review process. The NIH is also switching up its funding model to one that will decrease the number of scientific projects and people it will bankroll. Many scientists are hesitant to hire more staff or start new projects that rely on expensive materials. Some have started to seek funds from pharmaceutical companies or foundations, which tend to offer smaller and shorter-term agreements, trained more closely on projects with potential profit.

All of this nudges scientists into a defensive posture. They’re compressing the size of their studies or dropping the most ambitious aspects of their projects. Collaborations between research groups have broken down too, as some scientists who have been relatively insulated from the administration’s cuts have terminated their partnerships with defunded scientists—including at Harvard, where Delaney worked as a research scientist until September—to protect their own interests. “The human thing to do is to look inward and to kind of take care of yourself first,” Delaney told me. Instability and fear have made the research system, already sometimes prone to siloing, even more fragmented. The administration “took two of the best assets that the U.S. scientific enterprise has—the capacity to think long, and the capacity to collaborate—and we screwed them up at the same time,” Delaney said. Several scientists told me that the current funding environment has prompted them to consider early retirement—in many cases, shutting down the labs they have run for decades.


Some of the experiments that scientists shelved this year could still be done at later dates. But the new instability of American science may also be driving away the people necessary to power that future work. Several universities have been forced to downsize Ph.D. programs; the Trump administration’s anti-immigration policies have made many international researchers fearful of their status at universities. And as the administration continues to dismiss the importance of DEI programs, many young scientists from diverse backgrounds have told me they’re questioning whether they will be welcomed into academia. Under the Trump administration, the scope of American science is simply smaller: “When you shrink funding, you’re going to increase conservatism,” C. Brandon Ogbunu, a computational biologist at Yale University, told me. Competition and scarcity can breed innovation in science. But often, Ogbunu said, people forget that “comfort and security are key parts of innovation, too.”

Object permanence issues

Dec. 30th, 2025 02:31 pm[personal profile] cimorene
cimorene: SGA's Sheppard and McKay, two men standing in an overgrown sunlit field (sga)
People really watch Benoit Blanc movies without having ever encountered any detective fiction other than Sherlock Holmes and feel fully qualified to comment on the connections that they think they've made.

Remember the terrible articles in the late 90s that repetitively and confidently asserted that Rowling had invented YA fantasy, or low fantasy, because they didn't bother to check a single library or bookstore?

Just one thing: 30 December 2025

Dec. 30th, 2025 06:35 am[personal profile] jazzyjj posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished!

Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!

Posted by Daily Otter

Via Aquarium of the Pacific, which writes:

The Aquarium is proud to partner with the Monterey Bay Aquarium Sea Otter Surrogacy program. Thanks to the generous support of donors, this program pairs orphaned otter pups with surrogate otter moms to teach them survival skills for an eventual release into the wild.

A 10-week old rescued pup was paired with our most experienced surrogate mom Millie, but proved quite independent and did not bond well initially. Because of this, the animal care team had to step in and assist him with grooming 3-4 times daily to keep his coat healthy.

Grooming a sea otter pup is labor-intensive, requiring patience and meticulous attention to detail. Your support ensures that we can adapt to the needs of each surrogate pup.

Once stabilized, the pup was introduced to two other adult females, Cee and Suri and formed a bond with Suri. They spend the days socializing, foraging, grooming, and resting together.

The animal care team will continue to monitor his behavioral milestones in hopes that he will be released to the ocean next spring by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Sea Otter Surrogacy Program.

You can help pups have the best chance at returning to the ocean by donating at [this link] today. Thank you!

Nothing is ordinary

Dec. 30th, 2025 10:45 am[personal profile] annofowlshire
annofowlshire: From https://picrew.me/image_maker/626197/ (Default)
"[Surrealism is] the belief that nothing is ordinary; that everything in life is extraordinary. And being old is no more, no less, extraordinary than being young." - Leonora Carrington (Surreal Spaces)
beanside: (jbb)
It's Tuesday! We survived a Monday of a short week! We were actually really busy at work. I took 49 calls, and I was also doing other things, so it definitely picked up from last week. The people were mostly nice, but I swear that 20 of those calls were people calling to see if we had cancellations this week. The "But mah deductible" calls have begun in earnest.

By the time I finished for the day, I was very tired. Fortunately, Jess made jambalaya for dinner. It's their speciality, though at the house, we did it in the crock pot. It's 500 times better in the pan, may I say. Sautéing the mirepoix helps develop flavors a lot. We made it easy on them, and just ordered the diced mirepoix from Walmart, so all they had to cut up was the peppers. The recipe they used didn't have tomatoes of any kind, so they added a can of tomato sauce, and adjusted the liquid accordingly. It turned out SO well. I had two helpings! Jess did a good job.

Tonight will be BBQ short ribs, which should be tasty.

I have branched out in my studies to include the ship we're scheduled to go on in 2027 as well. They're sister ships, but the Rotterdam (2027) is a little newer, and I think has the teen club that opens up to everyone after 6. I'm going to play skeeball on the cruise ship.

We're under 130 days til the Koningsdam, and I'm very excited. Every time we pass another multiple of 10, it gives me a kick. When it goes down into the double digits, I'll be bouncing. It's still 5 months away, but it's creeping closer.

I'm still obsessing a little bit, making sure we have everything we need for it. Right now, I'm on the search for a dress for the vow renewal ceremony. After consideration, I decided that with all the work I'd need to do to the Siriano dress to make it fit, and be comfortable, it would just be a new dress. I'd need it hemmed, fitted, and I want sleeves to cover a bra, plus I hate the neckline and would need that changed. It would just be a lot. And I don't know that I have that much patience. I liked the color and some of the style, which is why I bought it, but it just isn't going to work.

I had ordered a dress from Ever-Pretty in their largest size. The measurements looked good, but when it arrived, I could barely get it over my head unzipped. I couldn't get my arms into it. I felt like a total whale, and felt moderately bad about myself for a good chunk of the afternoon and evening.

I've got two dresses coming from Torrid, a green long sleeve mini (I'm short, so the mini's tend to hit me mid to lower knee) and a black mini flecked with gold. I'm not sure either is the dress, but we'll see. I kind of envisioned a longer dress, but I do really like the silhouette of these. The green is a tie front, which usually makes my boobs look mighty, and the other is a skater dress, which I've always enjoyed. Torrid usually fits me really well, so they might not require any tailoring. I've also got a few dresses for dinner that I really like, including one for the Holland America Orange Party, which is a celebration of their Dutch heritage. I also have a sensible gray one for regular dinner. I plan to dress up a little bit for dinner. Nothing fancy, just a pretty dress or skirt.

Packing for Alaska is difficult, since in May, you never know what temp you're getting. Could be 60 (yes please), could be 40 or lower. We'll see what the weather says when it gets a little closer. Definitely taking my fleece and raincoat--we'll see if the heavy coat is needed. We have free laundry on the boat, so I don't need to pack a ton. Enough for 5-6 days should do it. Lots of leggings. Maybe fleece leggings. Night gowns, a mixture of tops, long and short sleeve. My best bras, and of course, underwear like I plan to shit myself twice a day. lol. I always overpack underwear.

I need it to be under 50lbs, with room for some souvenirs. Though I'm just going to get a few things. A magnet from each port, maybe some sort of native art, and little gifts for a few friends. I think between the four of us, we should be able to distribute our treasures between the suitcases without going over the limit. Though if one of us does, I'll pay the fee. Not going to get my knickers in a twist.

My suitcase looks huge anyway, so I think I'll be okay under 50. I may take a pair of jeans, just to have something other than leggings if I want it. (I probably won't want them.) A pair of flats for dressing up and a pair of hiking boots, though I may wear the boots for the flight. Tennis shoes will take up less room. That's about it for me. Oh wait, and slippers. Fuzzy, nice slippers for sitting on the balcony with a coffee and croissant.

Okay, time for me to go forth and get myself together for another fun day! Everyone have an amazing Tuesday!

Bingo

Dec. 30th, 2025 04:17 am[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
I have made bingo for Amnesty this month. Counting each 5 fills as a bingo, I have made two. \o/

5-1-25 B3 "In a Splash of Color"
11-1-25 B3 "The Sand of Celebration"
8-1-25 B2 "Until the Rain Comes"
5-1-25 O5 "A Palette of Appetizers"
11-1-25 O5 "User Interfaces"

2-1-25 B5 "Protect the Inner Core"
5-1-25 B5 "The Marvels of Brush and Ink"
11-1-25 I2 "The Car That Didn't Like Bullies"
11-1-25 B2 "Learning New Skills"
11-1-25 O4 "The Unicorn Door"
silveradept: A green cartoon dragon in the style of the Kenya animation, in a dancing pose. (Dragon)
It's December Days time again. This year, I have decided that I'm going to talk about skills and applications thereof, if for no other reason than because I am prone to both the fixed mindset and the downplaying of any skills that I might have obtained as not "real" skills because they do not fit some form of ideal.

29: w00t )

Consequences

Dec. 30th, 2025 12:57 am[personal profile] firecat
firecat: Ciri from The Witcher, in leather armor, looking over her shoulder (Witcher)
Turns out that listening to an audiobook of The Witcher in the vicinity of an iThing can cause a mildly irritating problem
spikedluv: (winter: mittens by raynedanser)
I did not go downtown today because of the expected (and received) ice. I did a load of laundry, hand-washed dishes, ran a load in the dishwasher, cut up chicken for the dogs' meals, scooped kitty litter, placed a B&N order for myself using a Christmas GC, and showered.

I read fanfic and watched Secrets of the Zoo (like, actually watched, it wasn’t just background tv). I also re-watched the first two eps of Mistletoe Murders to gather some information for a fic I’m planning to write (for [community profile] smallfandomfest; if you guessed that it’s a crossover with Murder, She Wrote, you’d be right *g*).

Today I tried the Ginger Peach tea. At first I didn’t like it, perhaps the ginger, or the combination, but it actually grew on me.

Temps started out at 32.4(F) and reached 46.8. We got a lot of ice, as you can see from the pics, and wind later in the day. The warm temps melted the ice off the trees before the wind hit, thankfully. But Pip discovered that we have a lot of branches down on top of the hill (aka, above the pine trees).

~*~



Mom Update:

Again, mom sounded good when I talked to her on the phone. She’s been eating and keeping it down. Sister A was there when I called. Also, Sister S showed up yesterday and she and Sister A got out one of the puzzles I gave mom for Christmas. I hope it encourages mom to do some of it. At least she still has visitors, but I feel bad I can’t be one of them right now.

Poem: "Ghost Forests"

Dec. 30th, 2025 02:02 am[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
This poem was written outside the regular prompt calls. It fills the "Accident" square in my 6-1-22 card for the Cottoncandy Bingo fest. It has been sponsored by a pool with [personal profile] fuzzyred. This is the second poem in the series Crystal Wood; it follows "Trees of Glass."

Warning: This poem is dark science fiction along the lines of ecological horror.

Read more... )

(no subject)

Dec. 30th, 2025 02:33 am[personal profile] vvalkyri
vvalkyri: (Default)
Failing to manage to get to sleep last night involved a whole lot of mom life pivot point greatest hits. Everything from the beginning of her first hospitalization to how things went with a different strengths to maybe it would have been better if I hadn't even been there after she broke her arm.

Good times.

2573 / Fic Year in Review, 2025

Dec. 30th, 2025 07:10 am[personal profile] siria
siria: (the pitt - mel smile)
My fic year in review: Biosphere, Doctor Who, ER, Fire Country, Interview with the Vampire, The Newsreader, A Nice Indian Boy, The Old Guard, The Pitt, Stargate Atlantis, Superman )

Added up, that gives me:

Word Count: 163,779
Fandoms: 11
Stories: 56

This is one of my all-time most prolific writing years, both in terms of total word count and in the fact that I averaged just over a fic a week. I guess vampires + doctors = inspiration. Who knew?

My most average fics on AO3: word count, hits, kudos, bookmarks )
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
This is an advance announcement for the Tuesday, January 6, 2026 Poetry Fishbowl. This time the theme will be "short forms." I'll be soliciting poetic forms of 60 lines or less, so basically below my epic range rather than only the short-short length of 10 lines or less. Free verse below the length limit is also fine. Here are 15 short forms with descriptions. Among my favorite short forms not listed there: hexaduad, indriso, sestina, villanelle. This list of 168 forms is alphabetical. Poets Garrett has my favorite list of forms, including a list of repeating-interlocking forms. Their main page has links to poetic forms of 3-10 lines. Plus a few of my own: A darrow poem is a short, haiku-like musing by dark elves. A khazal is a Whispering Sands desert poem in couplets. A moose track is a repeating-interlocking form. A tweet wire is a tiny 10-line poem designed for Twitter. Some short forms, like haiku and tanka, work well as verses in a longer poem. I have The New Book of Forms by Lewis Turco so most forms should be in there. You can also prompt with a link to any exotic form you find; I collect these things.

In addition to forms, I also need topical prompts. One-word or short-phrase framing will assist in keeping them small enough to fit within the theme. Here is a huge list of common themes. This page of idioms has alphabetical and topical listings. I love writing poems about an individual word; see The Phrontistery (WARNING! Black hole caliber time sink ahead!) for glossaries. Have an orientation that is not well represented in literature? Ask for a sexual, romantic, or other orientation! If it's not on any of my lists, just include a description or link to one. I also list gender identities and my characters with disabilities. Want to help me play with my bookshelf? :D I have The Conflict Thesaurus, The Conflict Thesaurus Volume 2, The Occupation Thesaurus, The Emotional Wound Thesaurus, The Urban Setting Thesaurus, The Rural Setting Thesaurus, The Emotion Thesaurus, The Positive Trait Thesaurus, The Negative Trait Thesaurus, and The Emotion Amplifier Thesaurus. Simply click "Read Sample" and view the table of contents for a list of cool ideas. You can prompt a sestina with six end words; I usually pick 5 short flexible words and one long exotic word, but I'll work with whatever I get. Favorite characters, threads, series, settings, etc. are also fair game but this is NOT the time for long plotty prompts. Consider combining a name or title with a short form, theme, or idiom. If you like to prompt with photos, this is a great opportunity for that. Just type in a topic (see above for possibilities) and click the Image link in your favorite search engine.

Among my more relevant series for the main theme:

Arts and Crafts America is ideal for picture prompts, or just name a craft.

Clay of Life suits words from Yiddish, Ladino, or Hebrew.

Fiorenza the Wisewoman suits Italian forms, most of which are short; also Italian words or phrases.

Hart's Farm suits Old Norse poetry or words.

Kung Fu Robots goes with Chinese forms.

Lacquerware suits Japanese forms.

Or you can ask for something new.

Linkbacks reveal a verse of any open linkback poem.

If you're interested, mark the date on your calendar, and please hold actual prompts until the "Poetry Fishbowl Open" post next week. (If you're not available that day, or you live in a time zone that makes it hard to reach me, you can leave advance prompts. I am now.) Meanwhile, if you want to help with promotion, please feel free to link back here or repost this on your blog.

New to the fishbowl? Read all about it! )

(no subject)

Dec. 30th, 2025 06:18 am[syndicated profile] apod_feed

This is the mess that is left when a star explodes. This is the mess that is left when a star explodes.


Poem: "Trees of Glass"

Dec. 29th, 2025 10:44 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
This poem was written outside the regular prompt calls. It fills the "Genes" square in my 11-1-23 card for the Drabble Fest Bingo. It has been sponsored by a pool with [personal profile] fuzzyred. This is the first poem in the series Crystal Wood.

Warning: This poem is dark science fiction along the lines of ecological horror.

Read more... )

Activism

Dec. 29th, 2025 09:41 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Be careful with each other

How activist groups can build trust, care, and sustainability in a world of capitalism and oppression.

Read more... )

Daily Happiness

Dec. 29th, 2025 07:51 pm[personal profile] torachan
torachan: a chibi drawing of sawko, kazehaya, and maru from kimi ni todoke (sawako/kazehaya)
1. Back to work today. A good chunk of the morning was spent catching up on messages from the past four days, and then I helped bagging downstairs for a couple hours (the week between Christmas and New Year is the busiest for us), and had a web meeting this afternoon, but otherwise did not have a ton of stuff to do so that was fine. I volunteered to help bag tomorrow and Wednesday, too. And then it will be another four day weekend!

2. Carla is planning to go to Wisconsin again for a few days at the end of January for her aunt's birthday. Originally it was just going to be Wednesday through Sunday, but one of her cousins texted today to ask how long she was going to be there and said she had hoped they could go into Chicago one day. Since that cousin has to work, and the birthday celebration will be Saturday, the only good day would be Sunday, but there wouldn't be time to do that and get to her flight on time. So we looked into changing the return day and were able to do it with no fee! So now she'll be coming back a few days later but will be able to go spend the day in Chicago with her cousins.

3. Yesterday I spotted Tuxie loafing on the lawn. He seemed very happy the sun was out after so much rain!

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