Good morning, RVA! Itâs 29 °F, and today you can expect more of the same: Clear skies and highs right around 50 °F. The weekend, which approaches rapidly, looks like a washout, though. Maybe start queuing up your favorite holiday films now so you donât have to have figure it out later. Here, Iâll get you started with a few of my favorites: Scrooged, Elf, Anna and the Apocalypse, White Christmas, Die Hard, and Home Alone.
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I feel compelled to link to this story in DCist by Matt Blitz about the new arena for the Wizards and the Capitals coming to Alexandria. I dunno! We just went through our own round of stadium shenanigans here in Richmond, and I think itâs interesting to see how that process plays out in other placesâlike, with the governor showing up and one of commonwealthâs senators giving comments. This proposed deal does require General Assembly approval, so itâs not a slam dunk. But, with Governor Youngkin and a bunch of Democratic lawmakers already on board, seems like an easy layup (OK, OK, I need to take timeout on the basketball language).
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Samantha Willis at the Virginia Mercury has more details on the Richmond Public Libraryâs plans to expand their Memory Lab with that recent $900,000 grant from the Mellon Foundation. Tap through to learn more from Chloe McCormick, the Main Libraryâs senior special collections librarian who is also trained as a folklorist! So cool!
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I love that âtruck spilled interesting items on the highwayâ is a defined genre of news story. Hereâs one in the Richmond Times-Dispatch by Samuel B. Parker about Mountain Dew cans in Norfolk. I take this storyâand its premium placement near the top of the RTD websiteâas a clear sign that weâve already made our way into the End-of-Year News Dead Zone.
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âWhy the VMFA pool doesnât have fish in it anymoreâ is an example of a great post on /r/rva. The original post is a fun picture and a good joke about a weird local thing, but the comments are filled with all sorts of great stuff, tooâincluding the full text of one of my all-time favorite Ned Oliver articles (from when he was still with the RTD). This tidbit, from a VMFA employee, doesnât surprise me at all, and I sort of wonder how often it happens: âDefinitely seen an influencer strip down to a thong bathing suit and pretend to swim in [the pool] for picturesâŚâ
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Speaking of excellent holiday films, the Byrd Theatre will show one of my favorites, Scrooged, tonight at 7:00 PM. This movieâs got it all: peak Bill Murray, Carol Kane, a weird cameo by Mary Lou Retton, and even Bobcat Goldthwait in a role that sorta makes sense! Itâs warm, scary, funny, and something I look forward to watching every year.
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Submitted by a handful of folks! This piece in the New York Times took Americaâs terrifying pedestrian death data and then did something magical: Disaggregated it by time of day. This revealed that pedestrian deaths at night make up the majority of a steep, 14-year increase. What a good lesson in data analysis! You never know what youâll find when you start slicing and dicing data in interesting ways.
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Researchers have found related patterns looking at fatal collisions that occur in the weeks before and after clocks change for daylight saving time. When the 6 p.m. hour abruptly changes from light to dark, for example, even as traffic patterns generally remain the same, that hour becomes abruptly more deadly, too. âItâs purely an effect of daylight or darkness â and itâs huge for pedestrians,â said Michael Flannagan, a retired professor at the University of Michigan. In the dark, pedestrians are harder to see than other road users. They typically donât wear reflective gear or lights, and their outerwear is often dark in color. American roads also werenât particularly engineered with this risk in mind. âWe literally taught generations of engineers to design conditions for daylight and not to consider nighttime,â Dr. Sanders said.
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Bus life.
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