Eric
@ericdet.bsky.social
440 followers 360 following 320 posts
Writing and rhetoric teacher, food cooker, dog haver. Wrote a book called Responsible Pedagogy: https://www.psupress.org/books/titles/978-0-271-09343-7.html Got a website too: http://rheteric.org/
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Reposted by Eric
hypervisible.blacksky.app
“One of the negative consequences AI is having on students is that it is hurting their ability to develop meaningful relationships with teachers, the report finds. Half of the students agree that using AI in class makes them feel less connected to their teachers.”
Rising Use of AI in Schools Comes With Big Downsides for Students
A report by the Center for Democracy and Technology looks at teachers' and students' experiences with the technology.
www.edweek.org
Reposted by Eric
socialistboat.dad
"This website is free" No. This website comes at a terrible cost
ericdet.bsky.social
Nice! I should clarify that this was only for the first ending, so I hadn’t even touched Act 3 yet.
Reposted by Eric
dustinedwards.bsky.social
Very much looking forward to this whole event including the discussion of my book on Dec 10th! I wanted to share again that the book is available for preorder and the discount code “DAMAGE” will reduce the cost by 30 percent if ordered from the press website.

www.uapress.ua.edu/978081736219...
Reposted by Eric
carebear2717.bsky.social
It's the new highways through Black neighborhoods: Data centers
chadstanton.blacksky.app
I’m sure it’s just a coincidence that all these data centers are going into communities that have been historically targeted for exploitation and have the least amount of civic power wielded by the people living there.

wordinblack.com/2025/09/alab...
Why Are Plans for This Alabama Data Center So Hush-Hush?
Officials in Bessemer, Alabama, are mum on Project Marvel, a proposed data center the size of 18 Walmart Supercenters.
wordinblack.com
ericdet.bsky.social
Thanks! By and large I’m just delighted (though I gotta go for a better ending). But in my head I was expecting maybe a 70-hour play clock, so 98 really got me for a second.
ericdet.bsky.social
Is this is self-own? Possibly. Am I a 40-year-old turn-based RPG devotee who completed Silksong? It is decidedly so!
ericdet.bsky.social
Didn’t finish last week’s @remapradio.bsky.social episode till I wrapped up Silksong, so consider this proof that @gameonysus.bsky.social was right about the true time it takes to beat this game. 😅😭🕸️
Silksong completion clock showing just under 98 hours.
Reposted by Eric
glairedaggers.bsky.social
The fact that this got slapped with the "intolerance" label is really just the icing on the cake huh
junlper.beer
i love the domino effect of trans people asking the moderation team to take harassment of trans people seriously and instead decided to perma ban a black guy who was one of the earliest users here
rvbdrm.com
So… Łink’s account is permabanned from Bluesky’s appview, but also gets banned from:

WhiteWind
Skylight
Bluescreen
Flashes

Basically all ATproto apps/projects?

WHAT THE HELL IS THE POINT OF THIS PROJECT THEN?
Reposted by Eric
shannonmattern.bsky.social
"Drawing on a wealth of sources ranging from satire and comedy to essays, sermons, and film, On Pedantry sheds critical light on why anti-intellectual views have gained renewed prominence today and serves as essential reading in an age of rising populism across the globe."
On Pedantry
A lively and entertaining cultural history of a supremely annoying intellectual vice
press.princeton.edu
Reposted by Eric
archive.org
This #CollegeRadioDay, stations worldwide are celebrating student radio’s past & future. Discover 9,000+ artifacts—station flyers, playlists & more—in the College Radio Collection, part of the Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications at Internet Archive. 📻 ➡️ blog.archive.org/2025/10/03/h...
Black-and-white flyer for WHUS 91.7 FM radio in Storrs, Connecticut. At the top, bold handwritten text reads: “SHUT UP AND LISTEN!” Below, a stylized illustration shows a strong figure with a raised fist, standing in front of a broadcast tower emitting signals. The WHUS logo is centered prominently, with “91.7 FM WHUS” written across the figure’s chest and arm. At the bottom, text reads “STORRS, CONNECTICUT.”
Reposted by Eric
kairosrtp.bsky.social
Kairos is hiring! We have an immediate opening for a social media manager who is able to join our current social media co-editor @vymanivannan.bsky.social to assist with outward-facing communication & act as a social media ambassador for Kairos on X, FB, BlueSky, and professional listservs.
Reposted by Eric
ckunzelman.bsky.social
ALERT! ALERT! We're in the last days of being able to preorder my book EVERYTHING IS PERMITTED: ON ASSASSIN'S CREED, which is a book about the Assassin's Creed franchise and how games reflect and impact the real world! Click this link and use the code MN93450 for 30% off! z.umn.edu/14943
Everything Is Permitted
An entertaining deep dive into the world, gameplay, and evolution of the hugely successful Assassin’s Creed video game franchise​A hooded figure stands i...
z.umn.edu
ericdet.bsky.social
Now that’s what I call a brave story.
mayteramarble.bsky.social
me playing FFT for the sixth time: no, I don't think I'll learn what Zodiac sign do
ericdet.bsky.social
I don’t know that there is a clearer distillation of my Silksong experience than this clip. (Potential gameplay spoilers for late Act II.)
Reposted by Eric
pokachee.bsky.social
I interviewed Toby Fox again. :) You can read the conversation in both and digital and print (!!!!!) editions of Game Informer. We talked about the “stupid” way to make games and his new journey with Deltarune. Read to see our convo and some awesome fan art.

gameinformer.com/2025/09/30/i...
Inefficient And Laborious – The Ongoing Path To Making Deltarune
We spoke with Toby Fox about his “stupid” way of making games and the big leap from Undertale to Deltarune.
gameinformer.com
Reposted by Eric
greene.haus
"Bleak" hardly captures it. Hell: Kaleb Horton offered more insight and perspective about the fading of the 20th century when he eulogized Toys 'R Us *in a Facebook post* than this TikTok lets slip about our sallow present, through glitches such as 'Old Noby' and "remember when we had fish tank?"
A post to Facebook published by the late essayist and photographer Kaleb Horton in 2017. He wrote:

Toys R Us is probably going out of business this year.

I'm fascinated by the collapse of retail, because what it really signifies is the collapse of the 20th century. 

The reason I pushed to profile guys like Harry Dean Stanton, Merle Haggard and Chuck Berry, was that writing about them is a way of writing about the 20th century, and how different it was from where we are now. How shockingly different, in retrospect. The migration out of the south, the descent of the Dust Bowl, which was a Biblical plague; the millions of people who were killed during World War Two. Monoculture, and the idea that a great episode of a television show would be seen by *half of all people.*

The arrival of flight, and the end of horses. Homes without electricity. Coming of age without computers, without television. Listening to the radio for entertainment. 

The 20th century was a long time ago and it's a ghost now. It's a ghost you see in the places you wouldn't expect. It's seen in towns that were bypassed by the freeways, the dusty little towns out west that still have old diners and motels and payphones. It's seen in the places that we left, places where mines shut down, places where tourist attractions died off. 

It's seen in Bakersfield with Buck Owens' Crystal Palace and it's seen in Roswell, which stubbornly maintains the relics of the '90s UFO boom. Things like that won't be around forever. Someday owners will die and towns will burn and they won't be rebuilt. And it's difficult to suss out what those things are, because they're on roads, physical and metaphorical, that we no longer travel. The ghost sightings happen in stupid places, unexpected places, and uncool places. A few months ago, I went with Marie to the Toys R Us on Victory Blvd. in Burbank, which still looks exactly like it did in Back to the Future in 1985 somehow. It's not nostalgia that you see there, it's just a customer base and economic model that's aging and won't be around a lot longer, and it's *boring.* There's no reason for anyone to ever go to Lancer's, the little diner by that Toys R Us. Because it's not good. People go there out of tradition, and old habits. 80 and 90 year olds go there.

We were lining up for a Nintendo, which is still a hard thing to keep stocked in stores. Toys R Us was actually the best place to obtain one, because it's no longer a place children beg their parents to take them to. When we went in, wham, there it was. The ghost of 1996. I was 8 years old, for a fraction of a second. The feeling wasn't nostalgia, it was a kind of temporal dislocation. A confusion. But it wasn't an immaculate 1996, it was a fading 1996. It was lonelier than I remember it. It's time for Toys R Us to go out of business. It was time ten years ago, fifteen.

There are reasons to be nostalgic about the 20th century. We weren't plugged into so many wires, so many screens. We were a little bit closer to the process of manufacturing and agriculture than we are now. We made more things by hand, and our goals as people were uniquely audacious and driven by mad, desperate power that was temporary and had to end. But the 20th century was hopelessly cruel and soaked in blood. The 20th century gave us flight, but it also gave us bombs that can end the world and Richard Nixon and his evil sidekick Kissinger and it gave us new mutations of slavery and race and class subjugation and it gave us useless, disgusting monuments to Confederate slavers and traitors and cowards. It gave us President Trump, who wouldn't exist today without New York City's collective cocaine addiction in the 1980s.

I want to find the ghosts, not because I miss the past -- the good old days can't return because they're imaginary and what you really miss is youth and if you're lucky a warm feeling of safety -- but because I don't even know what things we'll lose, or when we'll lose them, or how long we have to document them. I know ghosts when I see them. Toys R Us for the mundane side and the Salton Sea for the widescreen wasteland side. But I have absolutely no idea how many there are.

I figure people go first, then places. Those are the things we have a limited time to physically document and historically examine and preserve on film. The ideas will go away much slower, and some of them may be eternal, like cold wars. But those are a lot less fun because you don't get to drive to them.
Reposted by Eric
leavittalone.bsky.social
Trying to stop Tracey from going to a Saudi comedy festival is a solid 30 Rock B plot
Reposted by Eric
merrittk.com
its sad that she has such low self esteem :(
snakey.bsky.social
tasha is the one who invented the spell, actually
Reposted by Eric
beijingpalmer.bsky.social
This is my regular reminder to everyone that jstor is open to the general public now; a free account there will give you access to 100 papers a year.
youngvulgarian.marieleconte.com
regrettably if you try to point this out online you'll get yelled out by 79208 journalists going OH SO YOU WANT JOURNALISTS TO STARVE??? even if you're, say, a journalist yourself, and point out that while there are clearly no easy answers, the status quo isn't exactly working for society
Reposted by Eric
Reposted by Eric
jordanscarroll.bsky.social
imagine emailing a senior research fellow at the Moneybags Institute of Wealth Creation to let him know that there's $500 and a lunch catered by Sodexo waiting for him if he's willing to fly coach cross-country to give a talk
jdcmedlock.bsky.social
More than anything, they want to be patted on the head and told they're a good boy by the liberal elites
ericdet.bsky.social
This is such a silk pearl of wisdom. Finally defeated a certain musically inclined boss after taking your advice.