Why yes I did burn CDs of the full length versions of all 100 of my #100DaysOfMusic songs organized into cohesive albums. And yes you can also find them on Spotify but this is much more fun.
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"text": "Why yes I did burn CDs of the full length versions of all 100 of my #100DaysOfMusic songs organized into cohesive albums. And yes you can also find them on Spotify but this is much more fun.",
"html": "Why yes I did burn CDs of the full length versions of all 100 of my <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/tag/100daysofmusic\">#100DaysOfMusic</a> songs organized into cohesive albums. And yes you can also find them on Spotify but this is much more fun."
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When will riding in self driving cars get old? I try to do this at least once when I visit SF. I'm guessing it'll be at least 5 years before this is anywhere near normal.
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"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/2026/01/29/30/",
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"text": "When will riding in self driving cars get old? I try to do this at least once when I visit SF. I'm guessing it'll be at least 5 years before this is anywhere near normal."
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Aaron Parecki",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/",
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Finally got around to tucking the exterior Ethernet runs into a box so there aren't random wires dangling from the side of the house anymore. In hindsight I would have placed these slightly better and put them inside a box in the wall, so this will do instead.
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"text": "Finally got around to tucking the exterior Ethernet runs into a box so there aren't random wires dangling from the side of the house anymore. In hindsight I would have placed these slightly better and put them inside a box in the wall, so this will do instead."
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Aaron Parecki",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2026-01-24T20:00:00-0400",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2026/01/24/machine-knitting-the-life-and-death-of-dishcloth-chattie/",
"category": [
"machine-knitting",
"upcycling"
],
"name": "Machine knitting: the life and death of dishcloth chattie",
"content": {
"text": "I made this test-version of a chattie hat, learned some lessons, and decided I was ready to try a \"real\" one for producer Amy. I have this pretty-weird cotton-blend yarn that I got from Fab Scrap\u00a0some months ago. It's green, it's got slubs, some kind of elastic core maybe, I dunno. Every time I make something with it I think \"this feels like a dish cloth\".\nMirror-assisted selfie showing the front and back of the beanie known as the dishcloth chattie.The main body of the hat was made the same as my test version, with a little more care and no dropped stitches. I wanted to do as little off-machine hand-sewing as possible, so I started the rib with a fresh cast-on, then joined the finished rib to the hat body on the machine. I also hung the side edges together to seam up on the needle bed. This is where I made some mistakes!\nI sewed up the side seam inside out. \ud83e\udd26\u200d\u2642\ufe0f I was eventually able to un-pick the seam and re-do it, but popped some stitches in the process. Re-seaming was somewhat difficult.\n Once the seam was finished, I tried it on and found I had not made enough ribbing! This material is not very stretchy and I simply did not cast on enough stitches. The end result was a TIGHT band on the hat.\nThe photo above is slightly misleading - this was actually the hat right off the machine, before washing and blocking. The washed hat was too tight to wear.\nOh no!\nThankfully, Home Ec NYC\u00a0(the wonderful Brooklyn fiber arts workshop and studio of Hillary O'Dell) was hosting a sweater upcycling workshop, taught by Anne Warren, all about disassembling knits to reclaim yarn.\nProducer Amy and me, at a wooden work table, picking apart some knits.Amy has separated the band from the body of the hat.Everyone at the workshop was lovely. And it was so fun to learn that Anne is a machine knitter with a studio in Industry City, and a great newsletter full of local knitting events and resources!\nUnfortunately, the chattie did not survive being de-seamed, re-seamed, and de-seamed again. We weren't able to unwind it back into usable yarn.\nThank you for your brief service, dishcloth chattie. Sometimes our purpose in life is to serve as a warning to others. Your sacrifice shall not be in vain.\nKeen eyes might have noticed a familiar blue sweater\u00a0in front of me in those photos. I don't own any thrifted sweaters or other knits that I wanted to disassemble in the workshop, so I decided to embrace the circle of life. I decided to let go of my first sweater, and the crop-top life that could have been.\nI was able to fully unseam one arm of the sweater during the workshop.Back at home, I used my yarn winder to form to both unwind the sweater parts and cake the yarn at the same time.The five panels (front, back, sleeves, and neckline) became 8 balls of yarn of various sizes.While I didn't quite get the clean conversion of five panels into 5 big cakes of yarn, there was a lot less waste than I expected!\nHere's to this yarn becoming something new! Preferably not crop-length.",
"html": "<p>I made this <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2026/01/11/machine-knitting-a-chattie/\">test-version of a chattie hat</a>, learned some lessons, and decided I was ready to try a \"real\" one for producer Amy. I have this pretty-weird cotton-blend yarn that I got from <a href=\"https://shopfabscrap.org/\">Fab Scrap</a>\u00a0some months ago. It's green, it's got slubs, some kind of elastic core maybe, I dunno. Every time I make something with it I think \"this feels like a dish cloth\".</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/82/a6/01/01/604748ae3e66df020b06cc993f1ac5734adddf793f7caee2fca1d692.\" alt=\"\" />Mirror-assisted selfie showing the front and back of the beanie known as the dishcloth chattie.<p>The main body of the hat was made the same as my test version, with a little more care and no dropped stitches. I wanted to do as little off-machine hand-sewing as possible, so I started the rib with a fresh cast-on, then joined the finished rib to the hat body on the machine. I also hung the side edges together to seam up on the needle bed. This is where I made some mistakes!</p>\n<ul><li>I sewed up the side seam inside out. \ud83e\udd26\u200d\u2642\ufe0f I was eventually able to un-pick the seam and re-do it, but popped some stitches in the process. Re-seaming was somewhat difficult.</li>\n <li>Once the seam was finished, I tried it on and found I had not made enough ribbing! This material is not very stretchy and I simply did not cast on enough stitches. The end result was a TIGHT band on the hat.</li>\n</ul><p>The photo above is slightly misleading - this was actually the hat right off the machine, before washing and blocking. The washed hat was too tight to wear.</p>\n<p>Oh no!</p>\n<p>Thankfully, <a href=\"https://www.homeecnyc.com/\">Home Ec NYC</a>\u00a0(the wonderful Brooklyn fiber arts workshop and studio of Hillary O'Dell) was hosting a sweater upcycling workshop, taught by <a href=\"https://circularknittingjourney.substack.com/\">Anne Warren</a>, all about disassembling knits to reclaim yarn.</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/10/a5/99/d8/16ef4b52c4c162faa95f3a137ed07161d3200410e76780c38af3d9d3.\" alt=\"\" />Producer Amy and me, at a wooden work table, picking apart some knits.<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/a0/da/8c/50/d450cf453242ee4ca0eaf9e360866d03f492cc553e0a22bbd1439556.\" alt=\"\" />Amy has separated the band from the body of the hat.<p>Everyone at the workshop was lovely. And it was so fun to learn that Anne is a machine knitter with a studio in Industry City, and a great newsletter full of local knitting events and resources!</p>\n<p>Unfortunately, the chattie did not survive being de-seamed, re-seamed, and de-seamed again. We weren't able to unwind it back into usable yarn.</p>\n<p>Thank you for your brief service, dishcloth chattie. Sometimes our purpose in life is to serve as a warning to others. Your sacrifice shall not be in vain.</p>\n<p>Keen eyes might have noticed a <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/10/20/machine-knitting-the-secret-sweater/\">familiar blue sweater</a>\u00a0in front of me in those photos. I don't own any thrifted sweaters or other knits that I wanted to disassemble in the workshop, so I decided to embrace the circle of life. I decided to let go of my first sweater, and the crop-top life that could have been.</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/7e/bb/e4/57/784cdbdc1cd642a856f2c6cf3f3a6bae0d5c6f47fd448a85b9c9b744.\" alt=\"\" />I was able to fully unseam one arm of the sweater during the workshop.<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/bc/1a/3f/60/a31d64094b8f6fdc6f53506b681bbf1afc0d0807b049dedb204276f5.\" alt=\"\" />Back at home, I used my yarn winder to form to both unwind the sweater parts and cake the yarn at the same time.<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/59/e3/73/fb/4950e0c6898cd1e209598e1bee933f2df11f01fd5c7d058fc1c283ed.\" alt=\"\" />The five panels (front, back, sleeves, and neckline) became 8 balls of yarn of various sizes.<p>While I didn't quite get the clean conversion of five panels into 5 big cakes of yarn, there was a lot less waste than I expected!</p>\n<p>Here's to this yarn becoming something new! Preferably not crop-length.</p>"
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2026-01-19T22:00:00-0400",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2026/01/19/machine-knitting-fabulous-scrap-yarn/",
"category": [
"machine-knitting",
"fab-scrap"
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"name": "Machine knitting: fabulous scrap yarn!",
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"text": "\ud83c\udfbcRetro-post, retro-post. Post whatever, a retro post.\ud83c\udfb6\nFor producer Amy's birthday this year, we went to one of her favorite places: Fab Scrap!\nFab Scrap helps fashion brands divert pre-consumer waste to be recycled or resold. Fashion companies send them literal tons of\u00a0stuff\u00a0that needs to be sorted into what can be resold, what can be shredded, what's recyclable, and what's trash.\nThe perfect birthday activity? Doing a three-hour volunteer sorting session together. Afterwards, they let you take home up to 5 pounds of scrap from your own sorting or from their resale store. And 30% off items that are sold individually!\nAmy picked out a bunch of fabric goodies for her sewing projects, but I only had eyes for yarn. These are sold on cones, sometimes multiple pounds, in a pretty weird variety of materials and colors. I'm probably never going to find a fancy-schmancy merino wool, but there are some pretty neat cotton and synthetic blends in interesting colors and textures. They're already pretty affordable as-labeled, but at 30% off, it feels like a steal!\nSo, I filled up a bag and hauled a bunch home!\nBefore I can really make anything with these, I need to practice with them on the machine, find the right tension to work with them, and so on. So, it was time to make a bunch of tension swatches.\nFive knit swatches on a countertop. Details below.From left-to-right:\nA very fine dark blue, synthetic blend. This yarn is too thin to use single-ply, so I wound off a small sample and threaded in two strands. Even then, it knit at a very small stitch size. The swatch here is 40 stitches wide, with two sections of 50 rows each. One at tension T2 and one at T3. The stitch count is the same as the samples next to this one, but this fine stretchy yarn comes out quite small! I will probably try this in three or four ply, or combine it with another thin yarn, before planning a project with it.\n Neon pink cotton-synthetic blend. Nice and fuzzy! This needed to be knit at a much larger stitch size. This swatch is the same 40 stitches wide, with 3 sections of about 50 rows each, at T7, T8, and T9. It's so\u00a0pink! I'll probably use it for accent colors unless I come up with some absolutely ridiculous project.\n In the middle is a red acrylic yarn. It's slightly thinner and easier to work with than the fuzzy stuff. This swatch was made the same way as the pink swatch. It's a real\u00a0red's red.\n Next up, and this lighting doesn't do it justice, is a swatch of purple. This is a synthetic blend, that's very dense and not very stretchy. I made this swatch with the same 40 stitches and 3 sections of 50 rows. Suitable for Grimace cosplay, probably.\n Finally, the largest swatch is a neon safety-vest yellow swatch. This is bigger than the others because it's actually 50 stitches wide, and I did it in 4 tensions, from (I think) 7 to 10. Suitable for Big Bird cosplay, probably!\nWe learned that Fab Scrap would be hosting some special tours and sorting sessions for Martin Luther King Jr. day. So, of course, we signed up to return. I was a little more picky this time.\nTwo gauge swatches on a gray countertop. Descriptions below.On the left here is a bright safety-vest orange in my favorite fuzzy cotton-synthetic blend. On the right is a two-stranded blend of blue-green and white, also a cotton blend I think. Both swatches are 40 stitches with 3 sections of 50 rows each, at tensions T7, T8, and T9. The blue-green-white one was pretty painful to work with, and I dropped a bunch of stitches in the final section of the swatch. Thankfully it's just a swatch, so I was able to pick them up and work them into a section of waste yarn.\nNot pictured here is another very fine synthetic yarn, this one in light blue. I want to try this one three- or four-ply, maybe blended with the dark blue yarn from my first haul!\nSince these were all cotton and/or synthetics, I simply ran these through a machine wash and dry cycle on delicate. They haven't been pressed or steamed, so this is how they roll after drying.\nI should maybe plan to practice and swatch more than just plain stockinette with each yarn. Samples of ribbing and fair isle might save some time when considering which yarns might be good for project ideas. Then again, they might not be! Each project has its own needs, and I should be prepared to spend the time and materials experimenting to find combinations that work for each one.\nA lot of these yarns are on the\u00a0thicc\u00a0side for my setup - a standard gauge machine with needles spaced 4.5mm apart. This leads to a paradox where I have a\u00a0bunch\u00a0of yarn, but a lot of the projects I see out in the world are not really designed for these materials. I let this intimidate me more than I probably should. I can't help feeling that if I had more experience I would know better how these different yarns would produce different outcomes, or maybe that it was a mistake to purchase these.\nBut I don't know better, so I'm going to learn! Here's to putting these to good use!",
"html": "<p><i>\ud83c\udfbcRetro-post, retro-post. Post whatever, a retro post.\ud83c\udfb6</i></p>\n<p>For producer Amy's birthday this year, we went to one of her favorite places: <a href=\"https://fabscrap.org/\">Fab Scrap</a>!</p>\n<p>Fab Scrap helps fashion brands divert pre-consumer waste to be recycled or resold. Fashion companies send them literal tons of\u00a0<i>stuff</i>\u00a0that needs to be sorted into what can be resold, what can be shredded, what's recyclable, and what's trash.</p>\n<p>The perfect birthday activity? Doing a three-hour volunteer sorting session together. Afterwards, they let you take home up to 5 pounds of scrap from your own sorting or from their resale store. And 30% off items that are sold individually!</p>\n<p>Amy picked out a bunch of fabric goodies for her sewing projects, but I only had eyes for yarn. These are sold on cones, sometimes multiple pounds, in a pretty weird variety of materials and colors. I'm probably never going to find a fancy-schmancy merino wool, but there are some pretty neat cotton and synthetic blends in interesting colors and textures. They're already pretty affordable as-labeled, but at 30% off, it feels like a steal!</p>\n<p>So, I filled up a bag and hauled a bunch home!</p>\n<p>Before I can really make anything with these, I need to practice with them on the machine, find the right tension to work with them, and so on. So, it was time to make a bunch of tension swatches.</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/00/7a/e0/40/c90dc59dce77d5b68f4dcd1db810457e9f10cdf8a6ef8e8f81cd0758.\" alt=\"\" />Five knit swatches on a countertop. Details below.<p>From left-to-right:</p>\n<ul><li>A very fine dark blue, synthetic blend. This yarn is too thin to use single-ply, so I wound off a small sample and threaded in two strands. Even then, it knit at a very small stitch size. The swatch here is 40 stitches wide, with two sections of 50 rows each. One at tension T2 and one at T3. The stitch count is the same as the samples next to this one, but this fine stretchy yarn comes out quite small! I will probably try this in three or four ply, or combine it with another thin yarn, before planning a project with it.</li>\n <li>Neon pink cotton-synthetic blend. Nice and fuzzy! This needed to be knit at a much larger stitch size. This swatch is the same 40 stitches wide, with 3 sections of about 50 rows each, at T7, T8, and T9. It's so\u00a0<i>pink</i>! I'll probably use it for accent colors unless I come up with some absolutely ridiculous project.</li>\n <li>In the middle is a red acrylic yarn. It's slightly thinner and easier to work with than the fuzzy stuff. This swatch was made the same way as the pink swatch. It's a real\u00a0<i>red's red</i>.</li>\n <li>Next up, and this lighting doesn't do it justice, is a swatch of purple. This is a synthetic blend, that's very dense and not very stretchy. I made this swatch with the same 40 stitches and 3 sections of 50 rows. Suitable for Grimace cosplay, probably.</li>\n <li>Finally, the largest swatch is a neon safety-vest yellow swatch. This is bigger than the others because it's actually 50 stitches wide, and I did it in 4 tensions, from (I think) 7 to 10. Suitable for Big Bird cosplay, probably!</li>\n</ul><p>We learned that Fab Scrap would be hosting some special tours and sorting sessions for Martin Luther King Jr. day. So, of course, we signed up to return. I was a little more picky this time.</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/96/83/61/c5/112804af96043016f593f1cabfb9c40c882f7e88eb42b33b9557b0a2.\" alt=\"\" />Two gauge swatches on a gray countertop. Descriptions below.<p>On the left here is a bright safety-vest orange in my favorite fuzzy cotton-synthetic blend. On the right is a two-stranded blend of blue-green and white, also a cotton blend I think. Both swatches are 40 stitches with 3 sections of 50 rows each, at tensions T7, T8, and T9. The blue-green-white one was pretty painful to work with, and I dropped a bunch of stitches in the final section of the swatch. Thankfully it's just a swatch, so I was able to pick them up and work them into a section of waste yarn.</p>\n<p>Not pictured here is another very fine synthetic yarn, this one in light blue. I want to try this one three- or four-ply, maybe blended with the dark blue yarn from my first haul!</p>\n<p>Since these were all cotton and/or synthetics, I simply ran these through a machine wash and dry cycle on delicate. They haven't been pressed or steamed, so this is how they roll after drying.</p>\n<p>I should <i>maybe</i> plan to practice and swatch more than just plain stockinette with each yarn. Samples of ribbing and fair isle might save some time when considering which yarns might be good for project ideas. Then again, they might not be! Each project has its own needs, and I should be prepared to spend the time and materials experimenting to find combinations that work for each one.</p>\n<p>A lot of these yarns are on the\u00a0<i>thicc</i>\u00a0side for my setup - a standard gauge machine with needles spaced 4.5mm apart. This leads to a paradox where I have a\u00a0<i>bunch</i>\u00a0of yarn, but a lot of the projects I see out in the world are not really designed for these materials. I let this intimidate me more than I probably should. I can't help feeling that if I had more experience I would know better how these different yarns would produce different outcomes, or maybe that it was a mistake to purchase these.</p>\n<p>But I don't know better, so I'm going to learn! Here's to putting these to good use!</p>"
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at the @CSSWG.org (@CSSWG) F2F (face to face) meeting^1, hosted by @Apple.com (@Apple) in Cupertino. Not counting at #w3cTPAC, the prior #CSSWG F2F meeting I went to was 2.5y ago, also in Cupertino, and before that 2019 in SF. Good to see so many longterm colleagues in-person.
{
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"published": "2026-01-28 14:24-0800",
"url": "https://tantek.com/2026/028/t1/csswg-f2f-apple-cupertino",
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"text": "at the @CSSWG.org (@CSSWG) F2F (face to face) meeting^1, hosted by @Apple.com (@Apple) in Cupertino. Not counting at #w3cTPAC, the prior #CSSWG F2F meeting I went to was 2.5y ago, also in Cupertino, and before that 2019 in SF. Good to see so many longterm colleagues in-person.\n\n#W3C #CSS #webStandards\n\n^1 https://wiki.csswg.org/planning/cupertino-2026",
"html": "at the <a href=\"https://CSSWG.org\">@CSSWG.org</a> (<a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/CSSWG\">@CSSWG</a>) F2F (face to face) meeting^1, hosted by <a href=\"https://Apple.com\">@Apple.com</a> (<a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/Apple\">@Apple</a>) in Cupertino. Not counting at #<span class=\"p-category\">w3cTPAC</span>, the prior #<span class=\"p-category\">CSSWG</span> F2F meeting I went to was 2.5y ago, also in Cupertino, and before that 2019 in SF. Good to see so many longterm colleagues in-person.<br /><br />#<span class=\"p-category\">W3C</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">CSS</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">webStandards</span><br /><br />^1 <a href=\"https://wiki.csswg.org/planning/cupertino-2026\">https://wiki.csswg.org/planning/cupertino-2026</a>"
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"type": "card",
"name": "Tantek \u00c7elik",
"url": "https://tantek.com/",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2026-01-26T19:35:50-08:00",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/2026/01/26/20/",
"category": [
"audio"
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"text": "Apparently I missed the introduction of the 4.4mm TRRRS audio jack 10 years ago and just now discovered it. What a cool idea."
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Aaron Parecki",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/41061f9de825966faa22e9c42830e1d4a614a321213b4575b9488aa93f89817a.jpg"
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{
"type": "event",
"name": "\ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f The Level Up",
"published": "2026-01-24T22:30:00-0400",
"start": "2026-01-24T22:30:00-0400",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2026/01/24/the-level-up/",
"featured": "https://res.cloudinary.com/schmarty/image/fetch/w_960,c_fill/https://media.martymcgui.re/ff/1e/12/2e/a1c889885eca899c90ede89912e40c9b76c9025cc8d62c46334bae40.jpg",
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"type": "card",
"name": "Magnet Theater",
"url": "https://magnettheater.com/"
},
"content": {
"text": "The Level Up is an indie improv showcase. Join us as we watch amazing New York indie improv talents gain XP on the Magnet stage, unlock new achievements, and reach new milestones. Or do comedy.\n\nCome support Michael as he dons his hosting-duties cap for three exciting indie teams!\nBIZZO (IG: @bizzonyc)\nAM 2 PM (IG: @anthonyjulian_improv)\nUP TO NO GOD (IG: @uptonogod)\nI\u2019ll be playing with Bizzo, as well as with Michael and the rest of the Level Up!\nLooking forward to it! And to seeing you there!! (Yes, you. Come on out!!!)\nSaturday January 24th, 2026 @ 10:30pm\n\nMagnet Theater\n\n254 West 29th St (btwn 7th and 8th Ave.)\n\nNew York City, NY 10001\n\nTickets $10: https://magnettheater.com/show/tickets/60293/",
"html": "<blockquote>\n<p>The Level Up is an indie improv showcase. Join us as we watch amazing New York indie improv talents gain XP on the Magnet stage, unlock new achievements, and reach new milestones. Or do comedy.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>Come support Michael as he dons his hosting-duties cap for three exciting indie teams!</p>\n<ul><li>BIZZO (IG: @bizzonyc)</li>\n<li>AM 2 PM (IG: @anthonyjulian_improv)</li>\n<li>UP TO NO GOD (IG: @uptonogod)</li>\n</ul><p>I\u2019ll be playing with Bizzo, as well as with Michael and the rest of the Level Up!</p>\n<p>Looking forward to it! And to seeing you there!! (Yes, you. Come on out!!!)</p>\n<p>Saturday January 24th, 2026 @ 10:30pm<br />\nMagnet Theater<br />\n254 West 29th St (btwn 7th and 8th Ave.)<br />\nNew York City, NY 10001<br />\nTickets $10: <a href=\"https://magnettheater.com/show/tickets/60293/\">https://magnettheater.com/show/tickets/60293/</a></p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Marty McGuire",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/",
"photo": "https://martymcgui.re/images/logo.jpg"
},
"post-type": "event",
"_id": "47161161",
"_source": "175"
}