Back in November 2023, I wrote a joke article about having the good foresight to review the first season of The Angel Next Door Spoils Me Rotten, which had aired in the winter 2023 season, before a second season was announced that fall. While my actual review of the show did surge in views with the announcement, it was eventually overtaken by the joke article (that was not by design) so much so that by the end of 2024, the joke article was my 3rd most-visited article of the year while my serious review was 16th. The joke article just completed its best-ever week in terms of page views (albeit not good enough to overcome my review of Kaori After Story for the number-one spot this past week), and it is showing no signs of slowing down. I wondered what gives. Perhaps it was the release of a teaser image pertaining for the upcoming second season (note: no release date yet).
Month: January 2025
Things I Learned: In-Season College Football Number Changes
According to Roger Sherman, under college football rules, “[i]t’s legal to change a player’s uniform number mid-season—all that matters is the roster submitted to the officials on gameday.” This ensures that the opposing team has the opportunity to review the changes. If the change was not noted before the game, “it would have had to be reported to the official and announced” when the player in question takes the field. There are additional rules, such as those governing changing a player’s number to the number of a player at a different position. Conversely, the NFL avoids any issues by prohibiting in-season number changes. [Source: Roger Sherman (12/30/24)] In an earlier article, Mr. Sherman explained that a college football player change jersey numbers in the middle of a game in order to be eligible to catch a forward pass (players must be wearing a number outside of the 50-79 range to be eligible to catch passes). Here, the NFL has a more sensible approach, allowing the Coach to declare an otherwise ineligible receiver eligible before a play. [Source: Roger Sherman (9/27/24), text fragment link]
Things I learned aside, I highly recommend reading the first source article. Mr. Sherman tells a very fun story about selling a fake punt with subterfuge in an otherwise sleepy bowl game between Bowling Green and Arkansas.
WordPress ATOM Feeds and GitHub blog-post-workflow
I came across Gautam krishna R’s blog-post-workflow repository on GitHub last night (being January 2, 2025). In short, it is a GitHub workflow for fetching RSS feeds and adding them to a GitHub profile README.md file. I created a profile repository (I had been meaning to for a while) and added three feeds: My ATOM feeds for this site and The New Leaf Journal and my Buttondown newsletter feed. Everything worked, but symbols in headlines for this feed and New Leaf Journal were being rendered oddly. I tried switching both WordPress feeds from ATOM to RSS. Now everything works perfectly. It is possible that I could have fixed the formatting using the available configuration options, but for this purpose (for mosy purposes, really), there is no difference between the WordPress RSS and ATOM feeds. You can see my GitHub profile with the feeds here.
Things I Learned: Determining Saw-whet Owl Age
Project Owlnet is in the business of banding saw-whet owls to learn more about them. Kayla Randall of Smithsonian Magazine explained how they accomplish this:
The group uses an audio lure to entice the birds, capturing them in mist nets to bring back to the banding station. Once there, they place aluminum bands on the birds—’friendship bracelets for science,’ as they’re called within the project. Project participants also measure the owls’ bills, wings and tails.
While I did not know how one would catch and band a saw-whet owl despite having written All About the Saw-whet Owl back in 2021, that passage is not the thing I learned of the day. What caught my attention was how the researchers estimate how old individual Saw-whet owls are:
They use a blacklight to look at the underside of the owls’ wings and see their molt pattern, which helps determine their ages, a difficult task. Old feathers don’t glow as brightly under the light because the pigment has faded, while new feathers have a brighter glow, Boyle Acuti says.
I would not have guessed that they use blacklights to estimate the age of Saw-whet owls. [Source: Kaya Randall for Smithsonian Magazine]
Transcribing Podcasts
I present the following quote from Josh Blackman on taking podcasts out of context:
And this is yet another reason why I severely dislike podcasts. This was a 90 minute long discussion where Vance hit on lots of points. If you pluck out a few words here and there, and ignore the broader context, a lot will be missed. I transcribe podcasts, for good reason.
Josh Blackman
I am not a podcast-person, but I agree with the broad point in Mr. Blackman’s opinion. It is easier to take one line or another from a long podcast out of context than it is in a written piece. Transcribing podcasts sounds like a good approach. [Link: Josh Blackman]
Things I Learned: Sports Gambling in Q3 2024
Americans legally wagered $30.3 billion on sports [in Q3 2024], generating $3.24 billion in quarterly revenue (+42.4% YoY). Recent market launches in Kentucky, Maine, North Carolina and Vermont contributed to this growth.
According to a press release by the American Gaming Association (always working to improve the lives and morals of Americans), “Americans wagered 30.3 billion on sports” in Q3 2024. [American Gaming Association] This of course only counts legal sports betting, for example bets like those placed on the official gambling app of our nation’s capital. According to the press release, this legal sports gambling “generat[ed] $3.24 billion in quarterly revenue (+42.4 YoY).” I noted while reading the summary that “legal sports betting” generated more revenue than iGaming in Q4 2024 ($3.24 billion vs $2.08 billion) but substantially less than “[t]raditional brick-and-mortar casino gambling” ($12.28 billion). However, both sports betting and iGaming saw significant YoY increases (the latter was +30.3 YoY) while traditional gambling saw a tiny contraction (-0.9 YoY).
Things I Learned: Machida Squirrel Garden
[Machida's] most famous tourist attraction is not Pokémon-related at all. Machida Squirrel Garden is a small petting zoo that features over two hundred squirrels that live in colourfully painted houses. You can even feed and pet the squirrels, though don’t be surprised if they dart off after filling their bellies.
According to animal cafes[dot]com, the Machida Squirrel Garden not only hosts “[h]undreds of adventurous squirrels,” but also “a guinea pig village housing at least a hundred guinea pigs, and some fenced-in pens inhabited by rabbits, small tortoises, chipmunks, and prairie dogs.” [animalcafes.com] I’m sold.
(PS: Don’t tell the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation about this place.)