Hi folks, my name is Kevin Veale. I'm a Senior Lecturer in Media Studies and fiction author.

https://wheretofind.me/@krveale

"He/Him." Tangata Tiriti. Pakeha.

I'm into a wide variety of popular culture stuff in lots of different media forms, some of which I write about academically. I reshare stuff that amuses me, post random thoughts or resources, and generally hang out.


daily-knowledge
@daily-knowledge

daily knowledge: in 2022, the police raided the home of the rapper Afroman and stole 400 dollars before disconnecting his security cameras. he responded by turning the footage of the incident into a music video, after which the cops attempted to sue him for the "humiliation" and "emotional distress" caused by it. as such, the video can be seen here:


marfle-bark
@marfle-bark

the sheriff eyeing the lemon pound cake cracks me up every time. it also inspired a good song in and of itself!



trail-markers-in-the-sky
@trail-markers-in-the-sky

There's a long-standing gap in medical knowledge about what happens if you give someone "too much" vaccine– basically, nobody actually knows if that's even a thing, let alone what it would look like, because there's no ethical way to find out. This has been true pretty much since vaccines were invented. And I'm giving you that context because I want you to appreciate that a tremendous number of scientists and doctors wish they had that knowledge, if only there was some way to get it without turbo super ultra ethics violations.

Hey remember how when the COVID vaccine first came out and various powers told people to go get it, a black market sprung up wherein antivaxxers would pay to get out of shots, sometimes via simple document forgery... but sometimes via a stand-in getting the shot in their name?

Prosecution in Germany found a guy who, in over the course of 29 months, got 217 COVID vaccinations. (That's an average of 7.48 vaccinations per month.) When he got caught he volunteered for medical scientists to inspect him. The study has been published. tl;dr he's fine. Science emphatically does NOT recommend that you do this... but detectable anti-spike IgG in his saliva aside there's otherwise nothing of note, he's fine.


two
@two

In summary, our case report shows that SARS-CoV-2 hypervaccination did not lead to adverse events and increased the quantity of spike-specific antibodies and T cells without having a strong positive or negative effect on the intrinsic quality of adaptive immune responses. While we found no signs of SARS-CoV-2 breakthrough infections in HIM to date, it cannot be clarified whether this is causally related to the hypervaccination regimen. Importantly, we do not endorse hypervaccination as a strategy to enhance adaptive immunity.

i love this last paragraph. "well, it's not like anything bad happened, and he didn't get covid, but please don't go getting any ideas"