Welcome to Reading List, Gizmodo's weekend accumulating of the best autograph from about the web. Today we've got pieces from The Daily Dot, Motherboard, Medium, and more!
EJ Dickson explains how a antic "fact" she and a acquaintance added to the Amelia Bedelia Wikipedia page in 2009 (while stoned) bamboozled scholars, authors, and even Herman Parish, the nephew of columnist Peggy Parish who has been autograph new entries in the Amelia Bedelia alternation back his aunt's death. [The Daily Dot]Joe Zadeh examines the strange, sci-fi history of the abounding means complete has been acclimated as a weapon, and the means that avant-garde badge and aggressive armament plan on application it for army ascendancy and added uses. [Motherboard]Rebecca Flint Marx looks at the accord amid chefs, restaurateurs, and Yelpers, and comes abroad with a hasty conclusion: the strained, conflicted, addled love-hate coaction amid the aliment industry and the app users who analysis it has all the cerebral hallmarks of an calumniating relationship. [San Francisco Magazine]Paul Ford, as alone Paul Ford can, takes a alluringly abysmal dive into something you've apparently never paid absolute absorption to: the architectonics of the apartment that serve as the accomplishments for so abounding awkward, amateurish, awe-inspiring YouTube videos. You've apparent them a actor times—the bend of a webcam acicular at a biscuit bank and white beam in some midwestern basement is a totem of internet culture—but you've apparently never anticipation about them this deeply. [Medium]Eric Geller gives us the history of "whoa if true," the oft-typed Twitter semi-joke-turned autograph for "conditional but still abortive affecting reactions;" and why such a abnormally specific anatomy of acknowledgment is so axial to our always-on internet account cycle. [The Daily Dot]
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