152,711 records sent to Ireland’s Citizen Science Portal in 2024

The National Biodiversity Data Centre has confirmed that 152,711 records were submitted through its Ireland’s Citizen Science Portal in 2024.

The portal provides a platform for the coordination of biological recording and allows the public to submit sightings of species that they come across.

Last year, records were received from 8,301 individual recorders across all 32 counties on the island of Ireland.

The continuing trend of the majority of recorders only submitting one record has actually grown in 2024, accounting for 62% of all recorders.

The National Biodiversity Data Centre said that similar to other years, there is a “small but dedicated cohort” of recorders (40 in 2024) who are submitting over 1,000 records through the portal.

7 recorders submitted more than 2000 records over the course of the last year.

Citizen Science Portal

In 2024, flowering plants were once again the most commonly recorded group, with almost 37,000 records submitted.

This was closely followed by birds with almost 36,000 records submitted, while moths were again the third most recorded group through Ireland’s Citizen Science Portal.

Although the flowering plants group was the most heavily recorded group in 2024, similar to the previous year, no species from that group found their way into the top 10 most recorded species.

The data shows that the fox had the highest number of records with 2,552, followed by the common buzzard (1,327) and the hedgehog (1,319).

The breakdown of the most commonly recorded species in 2024 is as follows:

SpeciesNumber of recordsFox2,552Common Buzzard1,327Hedgehog1,319Speckled Wood1,228Robin1,1967-spot Ladybird1,033Blackbird954Pine Marten851Common Carder Bee837Wren819Top 10 most recorded species in 2024 through Ireland’s Citizen Science Portal. Source: National Biodiversity Data Centre

The National Biodiversity Data Centre noted that the top 10 includes three species from specific ongoing projects.

This includes the red fox (Urban Fox Survey), hedgehogs (Irish Hedgehog Survey) and 7-spot ladybird (Ladybird Atlas 2025).

The centre added that this “shows the importance of citizen science and how it can quickly begin to generate large quantities of data from across the country”.

In 2024, Cork was the county with the highest number of species being recorded at 2,336.

Kerry was in second position (2,108 ), followed by Clare (1,775), Wicklow (1,719) and Dublin (1,662).

The 100,000th record through Ireland’s Citizen Science Portal was submitted by Tina Aughney for a Clouded Border (Lomaspilis marginata), which is a species of moth. The insect was recorded in Drumheel, Co. Cavan on the July 29.

The National Biodiversity Data Centre thanked all of those who submitted records in 2024.

The centre added that Ireland’s Citizen Science Portal is available to be used by anyone.

If you see a species and are sure of its identification, the details can be submitted through the National Biodiversity Data Centre website so that the observation can be added to national datasets.

Big Sky Documentary Film Festival debuts 2025 lineup

The war in Ukraine. The theft of memorabilia from Disney World. Becoming a mother and battling cancer in the world of competitive snowboarding. A Scottish composer who buries the only tape of an album in the earth to be found when it may.That’s just a swath of the terrain covered at the Big Sky Documentary Film Festival, which announced the lineup this week for its 22nd annual installment, running Feb. 14-23 in Missoula.As a festival that’s exclusively focused on documentary, “we really take pride in accepting films of all different forms and backgrounds and styles,” said Julia Sherman, executive director of the nonprofit Big Sky Film Institute.They keep in mind both the mountain college town audience and the visiting filmmakers, looking for movies that challenge the form through unconventional storytelling, along with biopics and exposés on important subjects, and films focused on underexposed communities and more, she said. It’s a balance between accessibility and the uncomfortable and unfamiliar.

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There are a number of films about the natural world that are more meditative, others on “the power of the human spirit, and chosen families and relationships and Indigenous wisdom.”One of the things documentary filmmaking does so well, she said, is to “bring you into someone’s world and force you to reflect on your own life.”Big Sky’s the largest film festival in the state, featuring almost 150 movies with 12 world premiere feature films and 22 short-film premieres. Last year, attendance between in-person and virtual screenings totaled around 26,000.The movies will screen at their usual venues: The Wilma, the Zootown Arts Community Center Show Room, the Roxy Theater and Missoula Children’s Theatre. As they’ve done since 2021, there will be virtual screening options that run from Feb. 17-27.For filmmakers, the festival is a destination. It’s been included on Filmmaker Magazine’s list of festivals worth the entry fee for years. The movies that win in the competitions for Best Short (15 to 39 minutes) and Mini Doc (under 15 minutes) automatically qualify to compete for the Oscar in short-form documentary. The festival also includes the DocShop, a multi-day filmmaker workshop.

“Helen and the Bear” looks at the relationship between a free-spirited 70-year-old woman and her 96-year-old husband who worked in Republican politics.

Courtesy of BSDFF

Navigating the lineupSubmissions reached around 2,000, all of which are vetted by a programming team. More than 90% of the lineup is pulled from the open call. While that’s a point of pride, it also means there’s no “theme.” To help find your way through the offerings, check out the strands, where they’re divided up into subjects like “Activism and Justice,” “Sports and Adventure,” “The Art of Aging” and more.World premiere film “Butterfly in a Blizzard” tracks snowboarder Kimmy Fasani. It’s a “gorgeous biopic,” Sherman said, in which the athlete balances motherhood, reaching middle age in a demanding profession and treatment for breast cancer.

“Butterfly in a Blizzard” is a portrait of professional snowboarder Kimmy Fasani as she’s battled cancer and become a mother in a high-intensity outdoor sport.

Aaron Blatt, courtesy of BSDFF

“Flamingo Camp,” another world premiere, takes viewers to Slab City, an encampment of young queer and transgender people that “spotlights these ideas around community and your chosen family,” Sherman said.

“Flamingo Camp” looks at Slab City, a self-created community of young people, transgender and queer folks.

Courtesy of BSDFF

She pointed out a number of films that look at unconventional relationships, such as “Loving Bing,” about the crumbling five-decade marriage between a Chinese refugee and Danish immigrant, and “Mistress Dispeller,” which examines hired professionals in China who help break up affairs.They’ve added few new categories: “Feathered Films” is dedicated to the aviary world, with movies like “The Birds,” about a man who’s studying the mesmerizing murmurations of starlings, and “Birdsong,” about an Irish ornithologist who’s set out to record the songs of every species on the island.The “Stranger Than Fiction” category makes room for unexpected stories and subjects. They include “Stolen Kingdom,” a world-premiere feature about the theft of animatronic figures and memorabilia from Disney World. Another left-field summary arrives with “Recomposing Earth,” in which Scottish musician Erland Cooper records a new album and buries the only taped copy in the ground on the Orkney Islands, waiting to see if it will be found, and if so, what it sounds like.“The Art of Aging,” includes a feature, “Helen and the Bear,” centered on a 70-year-old woman who’s contemplating her own sexuality while acting as caretaker to a 96-year-old husband, who’d once been a high-ranking California Republican.The war in Ukraine is the subject of multiple films again this year. “Flowers of Ukraine” follows a 67-year-old anarchist whose attention had previously been focused on opposing development; “Songs of Slow Burning Earth” is billed as an “audiovisual diary” of the first two years of the war.

“The Encampments,” by directors Michael Workman, a Missoula native, and Kei Pritsker, looks at the leaders of student protests who sought Columbia University to divest from U.S. and Israeli weapons companies. 

Courtesy of BSDFF

War is the subject of another documentary by Missoula native (and Big Sky programming team alumnus) Michael Workman. He’s premiering a new film related to protests for university divestment called “The Encampments.” He and co-director Kei Pritsker examine the leaders of the student opposition at Columbia University who are thrust into the national spotlight.

Director Hugo Sindelar’s “One in Five Hundred” revisits the scientific reasons behind the 2022 floods in Yellowstone National Park and the effects on communities.

Courtesy of BSDFF

There are a number of homegrown films this year. Montana State University film professor Hugo Sindelar’s “One in Five Hundred” looks at the floods in and around Yellowstone National Park in 2022. Sherman said they look at the scientific reasons the disaster occurred, but also got onto the ground in the affected communities.Other Treasure State films of note include a 15-minute short, “Your Opinion, Please,” by Billings native and Roxy Theater alum Marshall Granger, about a call-in show on Yellowstone Public Radio.In the 11-minute short, “A Wayward Feeling,” director Kevin Richey visits with sculptor Patrick Doherty, who created the large-scale pieces out of woven sticks at the Tippet Rise Art Center outside of Fishtail.The “Native Voices” and “Made in Montana” threads have a few crossover stories. Director-producers Joshua Benson and James Suter’s “Tiwahe” is a “slice-of-life portrait” among multiple generations of residents on the Fort Belknap Reservation, according to the festival website.Director Taylor Hawkins’ “Two Medicine” follows Blackfeet Indian Relay racer Chazz Racine as he pursues his dream amidst difficulties and challenges he’s facing, as well as those of family and friends.Filmmaker retrospectivesThe festival often organizes retrospectives of filmmakers who’ve reached at least midpoint of their careers. Past subjects have included Jeff and Michael Zimbalist, Ondi Timoner and more.This year, the retrospectives look at the work of two directors, both of whom have collected numerous awards, such as Guggenheim fellowships. Matt Wolf has created feature-length movies like “Wild Combination,” about Arthur Russell, an influential musician in the ‘70s and ‘80s who had an unexpected set of skills and interests as a cellist, songwriter and dance-music producer.“Spaceship Earth” documented the failed “Biosphere 2” experiment, in which people were quarantined inside of a self-sufficient environment in the Arizona desert.Brett Story’s features include “The Hottest August,” about climate change and its effects in the outer boroughs of New York over the course of a month in 2017; and “The Prison in Twelve Landscapes,” that examines the criminal justice system’s effects outside of the institutions themselves.
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Directed by Les Blank. With Werner Herzog, Klaus Kinski and Claudia Cardinale.
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This year, the festival’s also revisiting a past honoree, the great Les Blank, with two films arranged through his estate and his son, Harrod Blank. They’ll screen an uncompleted movie, “Motorcycle Moment,” and a restoration of his 1982 classic, “Burden of Dreams.” In the latter, Blank went to South America to document the making of Werner Herzog’s movie, “Fitzcarraldo,” in which Klaus Kinski plays a megalomaniac who wants to build an opera house in the jungle. This requires at one point moving a steamship over a mountain to reach another river. Filming that without CGI, in natural Herzog fashion, meant moving a steamship over a mountain, among other crises the production endured.
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UK Foreign Office issues ‘do not’ warning to people travelling abroad

The UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) has issued a “do not” warning to anyone planning to travel abroad. As the Government’s foreign affairs department, the FCDO regularly provides information to keep travellers safe, among many other roles.In a new update on X on Friday, the FCDO issued a warning to people planning an overseas trip. The post reads: “Off to enjoy the nightlife abroad? Remember: drink spiking can happen anywhere.”Do not leave drinks unattended or accept drinks from strangers [and] Pre-arrange rides home so you do not have to accept lifts in unlicensed vehicles.”A separate FCDO travel checklist urges people to check the latest travel advice for the country they are about to visit, and to get appropriate travel insurance “as soon as you book”. People should also check travel documents, make sure their passports are valid and meet the necessary entry requirements for the country they are visiting, and get any visas needed.You should also “consider your health”, meaning to check the healthcare advice for all countries you’re visiting, check if there are any vaccinations you need, and check the rules on taking any medication you need abroad with you. People are also advised to apply for a new GHIC if their existing one – or their old EHIC – has expired, if travelling to an EU country or to Switzerland.

The best tech products and AI breakthroughs from CES 2025

Another year, another bajillion gadgets to talk about after CES, one of the world’s largest gadget trade shows that takes place in Las Vegas every January.  This year, we saw a car powered by the sun, shoes that  massage your feet on the go, and a six-wheeled transformer SUV that keeps a spare passenger drone in the trunk for those moments you just have to ”get away from it all.”  But a firestorm that broke out in Los Angeles the same day CES officially started quickly overshadowed the tech spectacle, sending a good deal of gadget coverage to the backburner while many of our dear friends and colleagues dealt with terrifying losses and unthinkable tragedy just a few hundred miles away.  Where does the gadget world go from here? In the midst of so much unknown, one major theme emerged this year: Tech leaders are all-in on an AI-accelerated future filled with real-world robots, self-driving cars and AI agents so advanced, they‘ll make Siri look like an old dial-up telephone. But at what point does that vision go from wild prototypes — one more fantastical than the next — to potentially life-changing solutions? I’m not sure, but that’s a question I’ll keep trying to answer as I power ahead with tech coverage this year.  In the meantime, here are a few of the gadgets I liked the most, including several that I just showed off on the Today Show. The shoes that make everyone stop and stareI’d gladly walk a mile in these futuristic, fancy-foot Nike x Hyperice Recovery shoes. The odd-looking boots heat up, vibrate and massage your feet and ankles using built-in air compression. Tested on Olympic athletes in Paris, the kicks promise to help you recover faster from workouts, improve your circulation, and soothe your muscles, tendons and joints.  They cater to your foot size thanks to the air compression system, and you can easily walk and run errands in them without issue — unless you consider a couple of errant stares from strangers to be a deal-breaker. These aren’t discrete. They’re big, and buzz loudly, and you probably wouldn’t want to get on an airplane with them. Oh, and when you jack the heat to the max, they get uncomfortably warm, at least for me.  All that aside, these are built to get you back to peak performance as fast as possible, and they’re like compression socks on steroids. As a runner — and someone who broke her ankle not too long ago — I’m all about it. No price or launch date yet, but I’ll be keeping an eye out for these.  Is this the shape of PC screens to come?I’ve now spent a full week using Lenovo’s ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 rollable laptop that I first reviewed a few days prior to CES. So far, it continues to impress me with everything from the new rising screen form factor to the outstanding battery life (hours longer than my current Mac).  At the touch of a button, the display rises up, expanding from 14 inches to a towering 16.7 inches. That’s an impressive 50% increase in scrollable space. It’s like having an entire second screen on your laptop, and it’s ideal for split-screen work. When you don’t need it, tap a button and it slides back down and you’re back to your standard display.  It makes a lot of sense, as today’s web is designed for taller screens, like your smartphone. Giving your laptop screen the ability to grow taller is kind of genius. Plus, it’s better for you ergonomically, and you’ll avoid tech-neck from staring down at your screen all day.  It’s expected to hit the market early this year with a starting price of around $3,499.  Why use your smartphone as a TV when you can take this TV anywhere? Here’s another gadget that just keeps growing on me. LG’s StanbyME 2, 27-inch QHD touch-screen is part giant cordless tablet and part ultra-sharp high-end TV. It comes with a mobile stand on wheels so you can watch, play, surf the web, or create wherever you want.  Who wants to be locked down in a single room when you can take this stunning display wherever you want? Great for bathtub binge-watching, sure, but just as well-suited to your kitchen, tailgate, home gym, garage and anywhere else you want a smart TV without all the hassle of a power outlet. (It has four hours of battery life.) As an added bonus it’s compatible with AirPlay, so you can stream videos or games straight from your iPhone, and it has a built-in “Information Board” to keep track of your crazy days. No word on the price, but we’re expecting it to launch sometime this year.  Dear plants, this one device might save you from … me.LeafyPod is an AI-infused plant pot for anyone who missed out on the green thumb gene at birth. It talks to your smartphone via wifi through a dedicated app. All you have to do is tell it what kind of plant you put in and fill the water reservoir, then let the smart pot handle the dirty work.  The sensors inside keep track of temperature, light and moisture — watering your plant when it needs it without overwatering — and it lets you know when something might be wrong or when it’s time to add more soil or water. The rechargeable battery lasts up to three full months, so you can go on guilt-free vacations with confidence that you won’t return to brown, wilted leaves.  It’s available for preorder right now for $148, with the first shipments hitting homes in April.  Kitty litter robot straight out of the JetsonsWe might not have flying cars yet but at least we got a litter box that’s straight out of The Jetsons. The Litter-Robot 4 is more than just a place for your kitty to do her business; It’s also a sensor-packed gadget that weighs your cat, keeps track of how often they go, and can alert you to important health concerns like kidney disease (if they go too often).  It can tell two cats apart, too, so multi-cat households aren’t a deal-breaker. When a cat uses the box it waits for them to leave then rotates and clumps the litter into a bag-lined drawer that keeps the smell and mess contained.  Roughly one out of every three homes in the United States has a cat, and that’s a whole lot of scooping that nobody really likes doing. For $699, that problem is solved, and it’s available now.  A smart pizza oven that bakes the perfect pie in two minutes Current Backyard Model P is a smart-home-friendly pizza oven with heaps of power. You can set it on your countertop or use it in your backyard to cook 12-inch pies wherever you have a few feet of suitable space.  It can heat up to over 800 degrees and it uses a super-smart algorithm to keep the heat even throughout, so you don’t have to adjust anything halfway through the cook. It syncs with a smart app that uses a “pizza build calculator” to pick the optimal cooking time and temp based on dough thickness, toppings, cheese and sauce.  This trip to little Italy will cost you $600 when it launches in Q2 of this year.  Mow your lawn without lifting a finger AI is also in the lawn care space and I’m all for it. This race-car looking robotic lawnmower uses cutting-edge machine vision to trim right up to the edge of your lawn without messy wires or a complicated setup process. Just pair it with its app and let the mower map out your yard and get to work.  As the name implies, this robo-mower is all-wheel drive for maximum traction, and handles up to ¾ of an acre in its default configuration, which is more than enough for any city yard I’ve ever seen. It navigates around and under trees, bushes and other common obstacles with ease, and it’s perfectly at home with rough terrain.  Presales are currently underway with a starting price of $2,499.  Porch pirates finally meet their match Porch pirates are the worst part of our on-demand delivery culture, but Hyve’s new package security system promises to keeps them out. It’s a smart box for your deliveries when you can’t be there to grab them yourself. Instead of letting them linger on your steps in the view of eager eyes, Hyve locks them away until you can retrieve them, using your smartphone as the key.  It uses your front door hinge as an anchor point so thieves don’t just nab the entire box, and it’s spacious enough for packages of all sizes. There’s also a tamper alarm and wifi connectivity that sends you images of deliveries as they happen.  Hyve’s waitlist is currently open, with launch coming in June 2025 for a price of around $300.  A little robot cat that blows Sometimes a gadget doesn’t have to have a good reason to exist but we love them anyway. I’m extremely confident that this tiny little cat robot fits into that CAT-egory. You see, it has a hilariously specific job: To blow on your hot drinks and food to cool them down. That’s it. That’s all it does.  The quirky little feline perches itself on the edge of your cup or bowl and quietly blows air over your food or drink at one of eight different speeds. It sounds silly – and it is – but it’s also adorable and it works just as well as if you were blowing on your coffee or soup yourself.  For just $25, it falls into the “so stupid I have to have it” category.  Mirmuri From the same folks behind the coffee-cooling-kitty above comes a vision for the future of robots that I can totally get behind. Mirumi is an adorable little robotic charm that hangs out on your bag or backpack like a tiny baby sloth. It has subtle-but-eye-catching head movements, reacting to movement in its environment and looking adorable while doing it.  At $70, it blurs the line between high-tech gadget and cutesy plush toy, but you can’t put a price on the joy it brings onlooking – and you – whenever you see it looking around. Are robotic pets the wave of the future? All signs point to… maybe.  Jennifer Jolly is an Emmy Award-winning consumer tech columnist and on-air contributor for “The Today Show.” The views and opinions expressed in this column are the author’s and do not necessarily reflect those of USA TODAY. You can watch videos on the gadgets mentioned above @JennJolly in Instagram.  

‘Best murder mystery film’ has 100% Rotten Tomatoes score and you may never heard of it

For those who are fans of gripping courtroom dramas and shocking plot twists, Witness for the Prosecution is one to watch.Despite its strong reputation among classic film buffs, this 1957 adaptation of Agatha Christie’s acclaimed play has remained under the radar for many modern audiences.With a 100 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes and a legacy as one of the greatest murder mysteries ever put on screen, it’s a cinematic gem.Directed by Billy Wilder and based on Agatha’s play, Witness for the Prosecution stars Charles Laughton as Sir Wilfrid Robarts – an ageing, sharp-witted barrister recovering from a heart attack.He reluctantly takes on the case of Leonard Vole (Tyrone Power), a charming but dubious man accused of murdering a wealthy widow, Emily French, to inherit her fortune.Vole’s alibi hinges on the testimony of his enigmatic wife, Christine (Marlene Dietrich).But when Christine unexpectedly testifies against him, claiming he confessed to the crime, the trial takes a jaw-dropping turn.Critics have praised Billy Wilder’s direction for bringing a sense of steady, quiet excitement to the film.A journalist reviewing the flick for Variety in 1956 also commended Charles Laughton for his acting skills, saying: “Laughton, sage of the courtroom and cardiac patient who’s constantly disobeying his nurse’s orders, plays out the part flamboyantly and colourfully.“His reputation for scenery chewing is unmarred via this outing.”Marlene Dietrich is also said to command every scene she is in as Christine, particularly in a flashback to post-war Berlin where she meets Leonard in a rat-infested cabaret.The scene not only establishes her desperation but also sets up a lingering question: Is Christine a devoted wife or a cunning manipulator willing to destroy her husband to save herself?One of the film’s greatest achievements is its ability to keep viewers on edge until the very last moment.As the Peschel Press review aptly put it, the climax “seizes you by the throat and shakes you like a terrier toying with a rat”.The screenplay, adapted by Larry Marcus, Harry Kurnitz, and Billy Wilder, cleverly expands upon Agatha’s original play.

Prediction: Ford (F) Goes Out of Business If Tariffs Go the Wrong Way

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24/7 Wall St

24/7 Wall St. Key Points:

While production targets have been lowered, Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F) highlights its operational and financial inefficiencies as its EV business suffers increasing losses with each F-150 Lightning sold.
With Ford dependent on hefty U.S. tariffs to stay competitive in the home market, Chinese EVs, priced as low as $18,000, seriously jeopardize the company’s market posture.
Further compromising the long-term viability of the EV market are more general problems including EV charging infrastructure limitations, cold weather performance, and new options such natural gas-powered vehicles.
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Transcript:
[00:00:04] Douglas McIntyre: The Ford Motor family is still trying to kill Ford Motor Company.
[00:00:08] Lee Jackson: They
[00:00:09] Lee Jackson: They’re doing a good job.
[00:00:10] Douglas McIntyre: They’re doing a good job. So I’m going to give you a number. they want to be the EV leader in the United States. So their flagship EV is the F 150 Lightning. It’s named after the their best selling vehicle, which is the F 150 gas powered.
[00:00:27] Lee Jackson: heard of that.
[00:00:28] Douglas McIntyre: Right. So in the fourth quarter, they sold 10, 703 of these. Which was down 10%. Ford said they were going to spend 3 billion, 30, 30 billion on EVs. I don’t know how much they’ve spent yet, but it’s a lot in the first quarter of this year is they lost a hundred thousand dollars for every EV they sold. Now they’ve dialed back
[00:00:56] Lee Jackson: That’s not good.
[00:00:57] Douglas McIntyre: They’d be able to produce 600, 000 a year. So the stock price very soon, I think will be where it was. When the current CEO Farley took over, so he’ll have been there that whole time
[00:01:10] Douglas McIntyre: and the
[00:01:11] Lee Jackson: Right.
[00:01:12] Douglas McIntyre: the S and P is probably up 100 percent or something, but it’s just, it’s like the Keystone cops.
[00:01:18] Douglas McIntyre: It just gets, keeps getting worse and worse and worse.
[00:01:24] Lee Jackson: I don’t know how they managed to do this. and it’s, and it’s really odd because it was like a banner year for GM. The GM EV sales were better. you know, other EV sales have picked up a little bit, you know, near the end of the year. So I don’t know how they continue to do this.
[00:01:44] Douglas McIntyre: Neither do I. Anyway, I think it’s always important to talk a little bit about Ford. Obviously, the stock price is horrible. One of the problems, I think, as you know, is that it’s one of these companies that has A and B shares. the Ford company doesn’t own a huge amount of the common that you and I can own, but they own a very large amount of the, you know, special, special voting shares. And so they’ve, they’ve got those. Now, I also find fascinating, Farley went to China he saw how great all the Chinese EVs were, and he said, this is an existential dilemma for us, which implies that if he comes, if those Chinese cars, they take the tariffs off, which are about a hundred percent now, and they can bring them into the United States. Ford Motor Company goes out of business. I mean, at that point you’ll have, you can buy EV, Chinese EVs that are apparently very good cars, according to Car and Driver. For 18, 000. So I can now get an EV. And I think, you know, the Mustang Mach E, which is the least expensive Ford is, I’m going to say it’s 35, 000 40, 000.
[00:03:00] Douglas McIntyre: If
[00:03:00] Douglas McIntyre: nice one, it’s more expensive. So Ford now lives in what I call the Tariff fortress of the United States. Okay. under the administration that’s leaving their 100 percent tariffs on these cars, my guess is that’s not going to change, which means that the U. S. car companies, particularly Ford, are being kept in business the U.
[00:03:27] Douglas McIntyre: S. government.
[00:03:29] Lee Jackson: Yeah, well, I don’t think Trump’s going to lift Chinese tariffs on EVs anytime soon, but I think you’re right. I mean, if they figure out a way to get those in here and they’re competitive and they they work and I don’t know, I think the biggest problem with EVs is just that they’re electric vehicles and there’s this huge cold front sweeping through the nation here in Mississippi.
[00:03:55] Lee Jackson: Mississippi. Now, granted, we’re in northern Mississippi up near Memphis, but I mean, it was 28 degrees today. So, I think in a lot of places, you know, where it gets, it’s getting cold, then you’re going to start to see the failures again. Then you’re going to start to see the chargers blow up again. And I dunno, I just, I get the sense the more I’ve, I watched the industry that it’s just not going to catch on.
[00:04:17] Lee Jackson: People don’t trust it.
[00:04:19] Douglas McIntyre: So your your point of view is that people are unhappy me. charging time. are unhappy with charging stations. Apparently now there are lines that
[00:04:29] Douglas McIntyre: So people are waiting in lines to get their EVs charged, which I just think is, it’s so awesome. At a gas station, I can drive in. And seven minutes later, I can drive out with a full tank of gas. There’s now rumors, and I think you saw this, I don’t think they’re rumors, that if you’re in a low lying area near saltwater, and the saltwater hits your engine, it sets it on fire. So you may be right, it may be that tariffs don’t save the EV business, it may be that the EV business has killed itself.
[00:05:02] Lee Jackson: I don’t, I don’t think it’ll possibly survive as it stands now because, hey, you know, the technology is, I mean, again, you know, Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) sells a lot of them. There’s no, there’s no doubting that. But, their numbers this time weren’t as good as expected. And it makes almost makes you wonder, are we starting to hit like kind of a saturation point?
[00:05:24] Lee Jackson: Where this isn’t the kind of car you can go out and buy a new one every five years unless you’re extremely wealthy So, I don’t know. I think the industry’s in big trouble period because one of the things I read recently and and and this is this is interesting is is that Natural gas powered vehicles are starting to be huge in China.
[00:05:45] Lee Jackson: What if they go to Nat gas power? Ford,
[00:05:53] Douglas McIntyre: invest money in EVs and find out that natural, you know what I’m saying, we’re going to spend
[00:05:58] Lee Jackson: Yeah.
[00:05:59] Douglas McIntyre: on EVs, but then we find out that people want cars powered by something else, not gas
[00:06:05] Lee Jackson: Or, or whatever, but I mean, come on, this is the same company that fired Lee Iacocca. And so they have a history of doing stupid things and, you know, bringing in this CEO is probably just setting the table for Bill Ford to get a new CEO.
[00:06:19] Douglas McIntyre: It is, it is.

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400+ New Queer Books Out in 2025

I have finally reemerged from the depths of Most Anticipated Books of 2025 lists! I’ve been looking through dozens of lists across blogs, Instagram, Goodreads, and more to build a database of hundreds of new queer books out in 2025. It’s obviously not a complete list, but it’s a start! It also has very few titles out in the fall, the biggest publishing season, because those usually get publicized later. By any metric, though, I have amassed a giant list of new queer books in a spreadsheet, searchable and sortable by representation and genre. And I want to share them with you!
Despite the abundance of queer books getting published these days, they can still be tricky to find. That’s why newsletters like Our Queerest Shelves and lists like this one are still useful. For example, I probably looked at 20 upcoming books lists before I found out there is a new Alison Bechdel book coming out in May!

I’m just letting paid suscribers (aka All Access members) in on this peak behind the curtain: this is the spreadsheet I use to build my monthly new queer books list for Our Queerest Shelves. All Access members also get lists of new queer books as bonus content throughout the year, plus they get access to all the paywalled content across Book Riot’s 20+ newsletters.

Without further ado, here are 400+ new queer books out in 2025 that I know about so far!
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