Watch: Florida iguanas are 'cold stunned' and falling from trees
Feb. 4th, 2026 01:21 amWhy a beauty spot in South Africa could be about to run out of water
Feb. 4th, 2026 12:41 am'Never imagined this': Indian village grapples with interfaith couple's killing
Feb. 4th, 2026 12:32 am(no subject)
Feb. 3rd, 2026 11:25 pmTurns out we might get snow after the rain. And they keep changing the temperature predictions, so Idek how much freezing vs melting we're looking at. I'm not sure what the roads'll be like anyway, considering the treatments they did will be so watered down. School's already been called out for tomorrow. I don't expect it to affect work at all, more's the pity.
My biggest beef with the weather right now is that I'm pretty sure that it's giving me a headache. My sinuses are trying to kill me and I'm nauseated besides. Felt better for a bit, now it's getting bad again. Here's hoping it's all cleared up by morning.
Cardinal's nest
Feb. 4th, 2026 03:25 amby Anonymous
When did he start working for his uncle?
He couldn’t quite recall. Not much from his early childhood could be dug up from the back of his mind. That wasn’t uncommon though, was it? Who really could remember anything before the age of — what? Four? No one remembers being a kid. All it boils down to is the stage where you’re useless, and the stage where you can actually do something to earn your place.
OR. Hunter, nephew of an organized crime boss, has recently been arrested. The court takes pity on him and instead of being thrown in jail, he's sent to a reparenting program to hopefully heal his lost childhood.
Words: 2579, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English
- Fandoms: The Owl House (Cartoon)
- Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
- Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
- Categories: Gen
- Characters: Hunter | The Golden Guard (The Owl House), Caleb Wittebane, Evelyn (The Owl House)
- Relationships: Evelyn/Caleb Wittebane, Hunter | The Golden Guard & Caleb Wittebane, Evelyn & Hunter | The Golden Guard (The Owl House)
- Additional Tags: Age Regression/De-Aging, Forced Infantilism, forced littlespace, non consensual littlespace, Crying, Diapers, Alternate Universe, Past Child Abuse, Emotional Hurt/Comfort, Age Regression Little Hunter | The Golden Guard (The Owl House), Fluff and Angst, Non-Sexual Age Play, Non-Consensual Touching, Non-Consensual Drug Use, Other Owl House characters appearing later in the story for a brief period, Hunter | The Golden Guard Needs a Hug (The Owl House), NOTHING IN THIS FIC IS SEXUAL, Minor Character Death, Humiliation, Fluff
Snowflake Challenge #15
Feb. 4th, 2026 04:35 pmHow Did the Fandom Snowflake Challenge Go?
It went all right, I'm always happy to have a go. Community spaces like these are really important these days.
Los sacrificios de Alicia
Feb. 4th, 2026 03:01 amby Alendarkstar
#beyondtheveil_realidadfracturada
Día 3: Tulpas.
Summary: Había una vez un sueño que no quería desaparecer.
Inspirado en la canción "Los sacrificios humanos de Alicia" de Vocaloid.
Words: 549, Chapters: 1/5, Language: Español
Series: Part 3 of Una imagen distorsionada
- Fandoms: Disney Duck Universe, DuckTales (Cartoon 2017)
- Rating: Mature
- Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings, Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Major Character Death
- Categories: F/M
- Characters: Downy O'Drake, Gabby McStabberson, Panchito Pistoles, Reginella (Disney), Donald Duck (Disney), Della Duck (Disney)
- Relationships: Donald Duck/Reginella (Disney), Della Duck & Donald Duck (Disney), Downy O'Drake & Scrooge McDuck & Hortense McDuck & Matilda McDuck & Fergus "McPapa" McDuck
- Additional Tags: Inspired by a Vocaloid Song
Just the Two of Them
Feb. 4th, 2026 02:41 amby Iamspeed23
Luz and Amity enjoy some alone time with each other. Fluff and flirting ensues, along with lots of kissing.
Words: 1671, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English
- Fandoms: The Owl House (Cartoon)
- Rating: General Audiences
- Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
- Categories: F/F
- Characters: Amity Blight, Luz Noceda, Stringbean | Snake Shifter Palisman (The Owl House), Camila Noceda
- Relationships: Amity Blight/Luz Noceda
- Additional Tags: Established Amity Blight/Luz Noceda, Fluff, Tooth-Rotting Fluff, They're Adorable and Deserve All the Happiness, Cuddling & Snuggling, The Human Realm (The Owl House), Forehead Kisses, During Timeskip in Episode: s03e03 Watching and Dreaming (The Owl House), Bisexual Disaster Luz Noceda, Lesbian Disaster Amity Blight, Sleepy Cuddles, Post-Episode: s03e03 Watching and Dreaming (The Owl House), Post-Episode: s02e21 King's Tide (The Owl House), Post-Finale, Flirting, I Love You
This got so much longer than I thought it would.
Feb. 3rd, 2026 09:50 pmI was going to answer them in a comment, but I thought it might be fun to talk about the whole mess of it.
So, I'm going to start with reading because that's much shorter than writing.
This feels brief and yet somehow overly complicated.
Basically, I primarily read short stories. Like, to the point where I read a single digit amount of anything longer than 10k. Part of this is because it's the length I write in but part of it is that I just really enjoy reading shorter things. I also pivoted a lot when as my vision got worse and worse. Even when I started doing primarily audio reading, I read much more short fiction than long.
Anyway, so what I wind up doing with this is that I have a tab stack where I pull up things and store them. I do a new stack each month. Literally anything fictional I want to read goes in that stack. As I read them, I save them to a bookmarks folder that's labeled with the year and the month that's then filed under 'Monthly Read Archive'. I'll do the same thing with the stories I don't get to either and put them into 'Monthly Unread Archive'. I like having them saved so I can go back through the year and pick stuff out when nothing I have pulled up is grabbing my attention.
When it comes to stories I really enjoy and might want to read again, I have a file where I save the story title, author, where I read it, and a link to the story. I then also write a little off-the-cuff review for it and save all that. Not only do I do this for my own reference, but I use all this for when I'm writing the newsletter I mentioned a few posts back.
I want to find a way to do some better archiving for stories I maybe read and liked, but don't feel like I want to shout about. With the bookmarks folder, I save *everything* I want to read, but it'd be cool to have a way to glance through just the things I really liked, but maybe didn't love or have things to say about it.
My writing stuff is a little more involved.
God, this is so much longer.
Things to know:
- I (at this point) exclusively write original fiction. I cut my teeth in fanfic and love it, but I fell out of writing it years ago. (I do, however, have the 3SF pulled up, so who knows what might happen. >.>)
- I write short fiction for submission (most of the time).
- I use multiple spreadsheets but you could probably knock these down to a single one if you're building your own. I, however, am not that talented.
- You can also probably use spreadsheets for *everything* I track, but I don't quite get there.
So, okay, with all that in mind, here we go.
I'll start with the part that's not in a spreadsheet. What that winds up being is maintaining a list of submission calls that are coming up through the year. This is a living document so I'm updating it when I run into interesting things, and clearing out things if I miss the deadline, decide I'm not going to actually submit, or did manage to get a story in.
I have a section for each month of the year, as well as a section for things that are opening for multiple months. If a venue opens multiple times a year, each opening gets its own entry.
In every entry I include:
- Opening and closing dates.
- A link to the submission itself with a title that mentions the venue itself
- The general theme/vibe that they're looking for
- Wordcount.
- Sometimes I include payrate but I don't do this all the time because it's not always important to me.
If something has multiple categories, I'll make a new entry for each one. So, one for fiction, one for poetry for example.
If I have an idea for a story that might work, or one I want to try and get into shape, I note down that story in a bullet point. If there are multiple possibilities, I put them all down.
So, that's part of it.
Everything else lives in spreadsheets.
Speaking of, I have:
- The new draft wordcount spreadsheet is what it says on the tin.
- The edited draft wordcount spreadsheet is also what it says on the tin. I like having these two counts separate because they're different kinds of mindsets, and 100 fresh words is very different feeling than 100 edited words.
- My GYWO habit tracker.
- The story notes tracking sheet is it's own thing.
In this one I have a few sections. First is the date, then the designation/title, the word count (and I mark if I did edits or new words), my overall mood as I was writing/how I felt when I finished, the things that went well/easily for me, the things that I struggled more with, and finally just a section for random notes. I use these for whatever I feel like. Being excited, talking about what I'm going to do next with it, random commentary about my characters being ridiculous. Anything goes for the notes section.
Each month gets a new page in the overall spreadsheet until I get through the whole year, then I make a whole new one.
And finally, I just have the "Full Story Tracking" collection. One day I'll name this something better or...something. It's not a great label for it, but I know what's in it, so I guess that's what matters most.
This one has a few separate sheets inside it.
- The stories themselves.:
This one holds all the stories I've written. WIPs, finished, published, or still submitting. On this sheet I have sections for story title, wordcount, whether it's finished or not, how many times it's been rejected, where it's been accepted, how much I got paid for it, and some kind of link to it. In the section where I mark down the number of rejections, I make a comment and list out exactly where those have come from so I'm sure I don't resubmit, or if I do, it's been several years and I know the story is significantly different than the last time they saw it.
- Yearly Submissions.
Each year I make a new sheet for noting down the actual story submissions. Here, I write down the story being submitted, the venue it's at, the day it got submitted, the day I heard back, and whether it was accepted or rejected. Something I keep meaning to add into this section is if the story can be submitted to multiple places at once (some venues want to be the only place looking at the story), but I keep forgetting to do that.
- And this last sheet is just my yearly stats
Each year has a row to itself and the columns are year, total submissions made, new submission stories written, new poems written (this is more hoping for the future than anything), new for-fun stories written (I try and have a healthy mix of Serious Writing and silly things that might involve characters in my RP or something), the total number of rejections, the total number of acceptances, the total number of hold notices, and finally, the total number of personal rejections.
So yeah, that's all of it I think. Are there more elegant ways of tracking all this? Oh, I have zero doubt. One day I might even let myself take out the two wordcount spreadsheets and just use my GYWO one and mark in there whether the words are new words or edited ones. Yet, this is how I've managed to scrape things together. It works well enough for me, and I guess that's what matters, right?
computer networks
Feb. 3rd, 2026 08:15 pmNetworking was never my strong suit. I spent a few hours this evening looking at documentation for Reticulum interfaces, trying to figure out how to use a generic wifi router for the physical layer of communication, assuming that the traditional ISP connection was down. It pointed me toward the 802.11s network standard, which apparently the Google Nest Wifi Pro supports. I had a hard time finding any other modern modems that did, and manufacturers seemed temporarily to abandon it for 802.11k/r/v protocols instead. So I tried learning about the different 802.11 protocols, but even this long article from only 1.5 years ago didn't include any of the 4 protocols I was trying to learn about. Are they already outdated too? *sigh* I am old. I tried learning about dual-band versus tri-band routers. Nothing fully "clicked" for me.
I finally decided that I have to start somewhere, so I just dropped a minimal (considering what the newest/best routers cost) $150 to get a TP-Link Archer GXE75 wifi. I'll see if I can configure a second network broadcasting from my house as part of Reticulum MeshChat. If I have to plug in this external device to get it working, then it's not necessarily better than plugging in a Lora node, except that a standard wifi router is actually useful for other things without special configuration and support. If I can find a way for a router to serve as both a traditional access point and a connector for a separate mesh between houses, that would be perfect. People could join their own transmitters without having to give up whatever home networking they've already created with their traditional ISP service.
In an ideal hyper-local mesh network under hostile conditions, we'd have multiple physical technologies for redundant communication. Speaking of... there was a widespread Signal outage today. It interfered with Signal chat coordination of legal observer positioning and ICE monitoring. There's already talk of radio-frequency alternatives, and they're asking for Ham radio operators to speak up about options too.
I wish I knew more of networking and communications, so I could help out. I did mention the Reticulum software and tech, but I would be a lot more convincing if I could setup my own mini-network with a neighbor. Not using established internet infrastructure (which can be taken away like the Signal servers today), but using neighbor-to-neighbor tech. It could be wifi routers, LoRa transmitters, or even ethernet cables strung between houses. Whatever it takes to keep people communicating across a whole city without the support of centralized infrastructure.
Veggies of My Estates
Feb. 3rd, 2026 04:48 pmI actually got my act together to grow some "winter vegetables" this year and have a dozen cabbages thinking about doing something, as well as some assorted greens. Haven't checked to see if the peas have come up, but there are also onions that were started as seed last spring that have gotten as far as scallions now. This is the tricky time of year when I don't have the irrigation turned on, so I need to pay attention to whether it's raining often enough to keep things going.
I harvested all dozen or so of my grapefruit and they're chilling happily in the crisper drawer. (Some critter had gotten to a couple of them, so I didn't want to leave them on the tree.) I have a half grapefruit every couple of days, since the word is that they don't always play well with blood thinners and I don't want to overdo it, but that'll take me through the end of the month or so.
The juice oranges are mostly ripe and I'm picking one or two at a time. (I think there may be a couple dozen in total across three trees.) And it's time to Do Something with this year's Seville orange crop, which reminds me I need to reach out to the friend who wants some for marmalade. (I can never remember what the middle vowel in marmalade should be on the first try.)
Other than that, I need to spend a lot more time pruning and weeding during the wet-and-fallow season. But the first daffodil bloomed today, so there's that.
Wait… there’s another Titan..?
Feb. 4th, 2026 12:05 amThree humans, wait.. but I thought there was only two, welp.. in this AU. Yes. AU, there WAS three humans. Belos the bitch, Luz.. and another one yet to be named.. other than Caleb of course. But what happened to the lil guy? Belos knows, Hunter vaguely knows.. and Luz? She’ll find out. This takes from the point of view of a self insert\ persona, so be warned.
Words: 3117, Chapters: 2/19, Language: English
- Fandoms: The Owl House (Cartoon)
- Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
- Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Major Character Death
- Categories: Multi
- Characters: Hunter | The Golden Guard (The Owl House), The Collector (The Owl House), Philip Wittebane | Emperor Belos, Steve (The Owl House)
Day 1841: "More questions than answers."
Feb. 3rd, 2026 03:18 pm
Today in one sentence: Trump signed the roughly $1.2 trillion spending package into law, ending the three-day partial federal government shutdown; the U.S. military shot down an Iranian drone after it “aggressively approached” the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea and wouldn’t turn away; a federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from ending Temporary Protected Status for more than 350,000 Haitians; Tulsi Gabbard told Congress that Trump asked her to show up while the FBI searched Fulton County, Georgia’s election office; Congress still hasn’t received a whistleblower complaint filed last May accusing Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard of wrongdoing; and 62% of Americans said ICE officers had gone too far, up from 58% in a poll conducted just before Alex Pretti was shot and killed in Minneapolis.
1/ Trump signed the roughly $1.2 trillion spending package into law, ending the three-day partial federal government shutdown. The measure funds most agencies through Sept. 30, but Department of Homeland Security funding expires Feb. 13, leaving about 10 days for Congress and the White House to pass a separate DHS bill or face a department shutdown. Democrats have tied any longer-term DHS funding to new guardrails on immigration enforcement, including requiring agents to wear body cameras, to identify themselves and not wear masks, and to require warrants for some operations. House Republicans, however, have signaled they won’t accept at least some of those demands, especially judicial warrant requirements. (Washington Post / ABC News / NBC News / New York Times / CNN / CNBC / Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal / Associated Press / Politico / NPR)
2/ The U.S. military shot down an Iranian drone after it “aggressively approached” the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea and wouldn’t turn away. The Navy described the drone’s intent as “unclear” and framed the shootdown as self-defense. Central Command didn’t describe what “de-escalatory measures” were tried before the F-35C downed the drone, and Iran’s U.N. mission declined to comment. Hours later, Iranian Revolutionary Guard boats and another drone approached a U.S.-flagged oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz at high speed and threatened to board it before a U.S. destroyer showed up and escorted it until the situation “de-escalated.” (Reuters / Associated Press / Bloomberg / Politico / CBS News / Washington Post / ABC News / Wall Street Journal / CNBC)
3/ A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from ending Temporary Protected Status for more than 350,000 Haitians, ordering the Department of Homeland Security to extend the program that’s set to expire this week. U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes said Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem likely failed to follow required procedures and that the record showed no evidence backing the administration’s claim that Haitian TPS holders threatened U.S. interests. Reyes also said the plaintiffs’ claim of hostility toward nonwhite immigrants “seems substantially likely” and that the decision to end TPS appeared motivated, in part, by racial animus. The order keeps deportation protections and work permits in place while the case proceeds. (CNN / ABC News / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / Washington Post / Reuters)
4/ Tulsi Gabbard told Congress that Trump asked her to show up while the FBI searched Fulton County, Georgia’s election office and that she watched for only “a brief period of time.” In a letter to Sen. Mark Warner and Rep. Jim Himes, the Director of National Intelligence said she acted under her “broad statutory authority” tied to election security, including counterintelligence, foreign malign influence and cybersecurity, and acknowledged that she “facilitated a brief phone call” so Trump could thank the agents, while insisting that neither she nor Trump asked questions or issued directives. Gabbard also said she hadn’t seen the warrant or the probable-cause evidence behind it. The FBI search targeted 2020 election records and seized hundreds of boxes of ballots and other documentation as Trump continues to baselessly claims widespread fraud that courts and election officials have rejected. Lawmakers and former officials said it was highly unusual for the DNI to appear at a domestic FBI search, and Warner’s office said her explanation “raises more questions than it answers.” (Reuters / Associated Press / Axios / The Hill / Politico / Bloomberg / The Guardian / NBC News / CNN)
5/ Congress still hasn’t received a whistleblower complaint filed last May accusing Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard of wrongdoing. The complaint has been “locked in a safe,” and the intelligence community inspector general’s office said the case involves “exceptionally sensitive materials” that require special handling and storage. One official warned that disclosure could cause “grave damage to national security” and that even the whistleblower’s lawyer hasn’t seen it. Gabbard’s office, meanwhile, called the complaint “baseless” and “politically motivated” and denied stonewalling Congress, saying it’s working through security and legal constraints. While the intelligence community inspector general’s office said allegations specifically about Gabbard weren’t credible, it couldn’t reach a determination on a separate allegation involving an office in another federal agency. The inspector general’s office said parts of the complaint are marked attorney-client privileged and could raise executive-privileges that may involve the White House. (Wall Street Journal / NBC News / Associated Press / The Hill)
poll/ 62% of Americans said ICE officers had gone too far, up from 58% in a poll conducted just before Alex Pretti was shot and killed in Minneapolis. Among Republicans, 45% said enforcement was about right and 22% said it hadn’t gone far enough, while 30% said it had gone too far – up from 20% before the shooting. Nearly half of self-described “non-MAGA Republicans” said ICE has been too aggressive in its deportation efforts. (New York Times)
The 2026 midterms are in 273 days; the 2028 presidential election is in 1,008 days.
✏️ Notables.
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Bill and Hillary Clinton agreed to sit for sworn depositions in the House Oversight Committee’s Jeffrey Epstein investigation after Republicans advanced criminal contempt resolutions for defying earlier subpoenas. The pair will appear for transcribed, filmed depositions on Feb. 26 and Feb. 27. Chair James Comer, meanwhile, said they “completely caved.” (Politico / CNN / New York Times / Associated Press)
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The U.S. will create a roughly $12 billion “Project Vault” stockpile of critical minerals to curb manufacturing reliance on China. The plan hinges on $1.67 billion in private capital and a $10 billion, 15-year Export-Import Bank loan. The Trump administration likened it to a Strategic Petroleum Reserve-style backstop after China tightened controls such as licensing for rare-earth magnets. (Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal)
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For the fifth time, a federal judge ruled against the Trump administration’s effort to stop off shore wind farm construction. Judge Royce Lamberth said Orsted’s Sunrise Wind project would suffer “irreparable harm” and said the administration likely acted arbitrarily, failing to adequately explain its claimed national security concerns even after he reviewed classified material under seal. (New York Times / Bloomberg)
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After Trump reportedly dropped his demand that Harvard pay the government $200 million, he denied backtracking and said the government was now seeking $1 billion “in damages.” He called for investigations into Harvard’s handling of antisemitism to become criminal. (New York Times / Politico / Associated Press)
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Trump said the Kennedy Center will close for roughly two years for what he called a “complete rebuilding,” while insisting he’s “not ripping it down” and will reuse the structure’s steel and some marble. He put the price at “probably around $200 million,” said financing is “fully in place,” and described his big plans for “brand-new” heating and air conditioning. Lawmakers raised oversight questions, saying Congress should have been consulted. Trump, meanwhile, said his plan is “totally subject” to approval by the board he installed. (ABC News / NPR / NBC News / Associated Press / Axios)
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Trump said he wants the proposed “Independence Arch” overlooking the Potomac River to be the world’s biggest. He wants a 250-foot version, which architectural experts and historians warn would dwarf and overwhelm the corridor between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery and block key sightlines. (Washington Post / CBS News)
- Today last year: Day 1476: "Worth the price."
- Four years ago today: Day 380: "Amateur hour."
- Five years ago today: Day 15: "We need to act."
- Six years ago today: Day 1110: "History will not be kind to Donald Trump."
- 9 years ago today: Day 15: The massacre.
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February Uglies & Question a Day Meme
Feb. 3rd, 2026 06:18 pmI can't figure out if I need to bundle my Disney + and Hulu subscriptions yet? I don't care all that much about the Disney one, it's the Hulu that I don't want to lose. Apparently Disney is slowly phasing out their Hulu app and combining everything with the Disney + app. I wish they wouldn't do that, but I get it. It's probably cheaper if I bundle them. But I want to keep my shows on Hulu - and they aren't available on Disney yet.
Confused? So am I.
Between work, Physical Therapy, the internet, church....I live in perpetual state of confusion. Work confuses me on a daily basis - after five years of this, you'd think I'd have gotten used to it? Maybe just resigned.
Tortured myself by looking at trips to warm places that I can't afford to physically or financially visit at the moment.
Also tortured myself by looking at this thing - which is cool, but I can't afford it nor do I think I could get it to work effectively. (Facebook likes to throw stuff at me that I can't afford and don't really require.)
Enuf whinging.
At least I got my exercises done. (Although he didn't manage to send me the revised ones yet, so I did last week's program to the extent that I could. There's one that I think we discontinued, because I can't do it correctly at home.)
Need to make dinner, just don't know what I want to make. Thinking mac and cheese - the gluten free version. Although probably shouldn't.
***
1. What’s your favourite hot beverage? How do you make it?
Currently - matcha latte. Get a small teaspoon or two of matcha powder, a little hot water, then add almond/coconut milk, then head in microwave. (OR get it from a coffee shop with steamed milk of your choice.) (I also like cold matcha latte.)
Also, dark organic unsweetened chocolate, milk, steamed over a stove, add cinnamon and vanilla. Serve with whipped cream.
2. When was the last time you saw an original hand-painted painting?
Now? I'm an artist and there's one on my watercolor easel in process.
Also if you been following my journal at all regularly? You've seen one fairly recently as well. I've been posting my original hand-painted paintings.
If this means in person? Again for myself? Now. It's in the corner next to the windows, along with a stack of recently painted watercolors. I'm a painter? Specializing in watercolors.
3. Is there a book you’ve seen made into a film and been disappointed with the result?
Too many to count. The problem is what I see in my head is rarely what the film maker or adapter is viewing in theirs - so, obviously it will be different? There are exceptions but they are rare. I've learned from experience to put as much time as possible between when I read the book and when I see the movie. Or not to read the book first.
That said? I've been pleasantly surprised by a lot of adaptations. Particularly fantasy and sci-fi adaptations.
I remember being annoyed by the first film adaptation of Interview with the Vampire. Tom Cruise was horribly miscast in that role.
