Web Favorites

My main blog, Los Thunderlads, features a number of links pages, some of which I update frequently.  Here's what those pages looked like as of 1 October 2011. The boldface label at the top of each section links to the page. 

Comic Strips


(This page most recently updated 25 September 2011)
Comics
These links are in a rough order with the most frequently clicked links near the top and the least frequently clicked near the bottom.  Since the list is long, newly added links first appear nearer the middle to give them a chance to attract notice.
xkcd, stick figures who enjoy math
DailyKos comics section, including Tom Tomorrow, Slowpoke, Matt Wuerker, Matt Bors, and others who express frustration with the US political scene
Indexed, Jessica Hagy uses charts and graphs to analyze some really important relationships
The K Chronicles, cartoonist Keith Knight (who also does The Knight Life)
Cul de Sac, a strip following in the tradition of Peanuts, by imagining children as less-inhibited adults
Bug Comics, “random nonsense five days a week”
Spiked Math, complex reasoning, simple hilarity
Retail, which shows that a serial strip can be drawn in the style of a gag-a-day strip and still work
Doghouse Diaries, no dogs in sight
Sarah E. Laing’s “Let Me Be Frank,” and her “Forty Four Ways of Looking at an Apple
Wondermark, looks like 1896, reads like 1996
Imagine This, quietly brilliant gag-a-day strip
Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, the world of some grumpy grad student
Tom the Dancing Bug, Ruben Bolling expresses his frustration with the US political scene
Bad Reporter, what the front page of the newspaper might as well look like
Lucy Knisly on LiveJournal and her new Stop Paying Attention strips (the old ones are archived here)
Bizarro Comics, showing that you don’t have to mention politics to be radical, since whimsy itself can be a deadly threat to the bad guys
Deflocked, the view from inside “a secret animal preserve for displaced and disenchanted pets”
Partially Clips, “web comic for adults”
Ferd’nand, wordless strip that is in some way associated with Western Europe
The City, John Backderf (aka “Derf”) expresses his frustration with the US political scene
Unshelved, a strip by librarians, about librarians, for librarians.  If you’re a non-librarian and you read it, you’re a voyeur.
Mutts,  Patrick McDonnell reimagines Krazy Kat and Ignatz in a gentler light, with Ignatz transformed from mouse to dog
Comics.com, aggregates daily strips from the US newspaper syndicates
Garfield Minus Garfield, which made us wonder how they keep “Garfield” from being funny, hasn’t updated for a while; the Square Root of Minus Garfield is still going, though
“Too Much Coffee Man,” a.k.a. How to Be Happy, by Shannon Wheeler
Zippy, which Acilius has now spent decades feeling bad about not liking
Tony Millionaire’s Maakies, which picks up where the Katzenjammer Kids may someday leave off
Unwinder’s Tall Comics, a web comic about people who try to entertain themselves without using the web
Andertoons, one panel gag-a-day; amiable, but clever
Girls With Slingshots, Danielle Corsetto tells of “Two Girls, A Bar, and a Talking Cactus”
Tiny Sepuku, advice for people who are too far gone to take advice
Weird Green Cat, by Brian Donnelly, who describes it as “hard to describe”
Pickles, which the cool kids don’t like
Six Chix, who are Isabella Bannerman, Margaret Shulock, Rina Piccolo,  Anne Gibbons, Benita Epstein, and Stephanie Piro
Hark! A Vagrant!”  Canadian Kate Beaton’s “comic about failure”
Pooch Café, a “dog’s eye view of life” strip
Toothpaste for Dinner- you know how there are newspaper comics like Crankshaft that are funny only once in a long while, but that always seem like they should be funny?  Well, this is a webcomic with the same property.
Monty doesn’t really stand out as a black-and-white strip in a daily newspaper, but look at it in color and you’ll be a fan
Scary Gary, monstrous people lead ordinary lives
Dinosaur Comics, T. Rex ‘n’ friends have a series of bull sessions
The New Adventures of Queen Victoria, mainly for people over the age of forty who are nostalgic for the animated parts of Monty Python, though it may also appeal to people over the age of 140 who are nostalgic for Queen Victoria’s reign
Request Comics, which somebody must have asked for
News and Comment
An alphabetical list
Comic Strip of the Day, by someone who claims to read 120 strips daily (I hope for his sake that he’s lying)
Comics Curmudgeon, Josh Fruhlinger reads the funny papers
Comics Reporter
Fleen, “home of the webcomics Action News Team”
Language Log’s “Linguistics in the Comics” section
Team Cul-de-Sac
Archives and Graphic Novels
An alphabetical list
Angriest Dog in the World, which was hilarious when it was new, which was about 30 years ago
Captain Confederacy, which imagines what the world might be like if the Confederacy had won the US Civil War, and superheroes were real, and the ruling elite of the Confederacy manipulated those superheroes into perpetuating white supremacy.  You know, the obvious questions everyone asks when they study the history of the 1860s.  It’s kind of like its contemporary The Watchmen, only with a focus on mass media as a regressive force in race relations.
Carol Lay’s “Story Minute” archives
The Comic Torah, Aaron Freeman and Sharon Rosenzweig reimagine “the (very!) Good Book”
Comics With Problems, comics that address themselves to social problems, but which themselves represent other social problems
DAR: A Super Girly Top Secret Comic Diary, by Erika Moen
David Rees’Get Your War On, My New Fighting Technique is Unstoppable, My New Filing Technique is Unstoppable, Adventures of Confessions of Saint Augustine Bear, and “Relationshapes,” strips which were apparently well-liked among the people who read this blog, although Acilius suspects some of them of sucking.
Dykes to Watch Out For archive, selections from Alison Bechdel’s great strip
Lucy Knisly’s Stop Paying Attention archive
Thinkin’ Lincoln, heads of famous historical figures are associated with improbable remarks
Troubletown, Lloyd Dangle expressed his frustration with the US political scene
“White Boy,” later known as “The Adventures of White Boy in Skull Valley,” later still as “Skull Valley,” was a newspaper strip that artist Garrett Price drew for a few years in the 1930s.  This site has scans of a couple of strips, along with a biographical note about Price; this site has a larger selection of strips;  a 2004 special issue of Comics Journal featuring the first 32 “White Boy” strips is no longer available, unfortunately.

Filters


(This page was most recently updated 1 March 2011)
The world’s chief web filter is of course Twitter; we’re there.  So are most of the people below.
Arts and Letters Daily, perhaps the most intellectually ambitious of all links pages
Barking Up the Wrong Tree, questions and answers
BoingBoing, a filter blog with a lot of tech, some art, and occasionally a ukulele or two
Crooked Brains, galleries featuring bold design and whimsical products
Dark Roasted Blend, lots of little text linking to interesting things
Fark, which began as a picture of a squirrel’s genitals, and now is a big traffic driver
haha.nu, mostly visuals
Jason Kottke, one of the oldest continuously updated sites on the web
Neatorama, funny stuff
3quarksdaily, rather scholarly in its focus

General Interest Blogs and Miscellaneous


(This page most recently updated 9 February 2011)
General Interest Blogs
Los Thunderlads itself is a general interest blog, so we defend this unfashionable category.
Alison Bechdel, the creator of “Dykes to Watch Out For,” presides over a mass of remarkably erudite commenters
Ben Bass and Beyond, man from Chicago who admires cleverness
Book Trek, “field notes on books, environmentalism, and found topics”
The Church of Rationality, random thoughts from some German dude
Colby Cosh, a Canadian of rightish views
Coyote Crossing, “writing and photography from the Mojave desert and elsewhere by Chris Clarke”
Duncan Mitchel, “making the world safe for people”
The Effect of Small Animals, Chicagoan Elizabeth Hildreth
Eve Tushnet, Washington, DC’s favorite native born Roman Catholic/ secular Jewish conservative lesbian writer
The Hannibal Blog, journalist Andreas Kluth makes frequent reference to Hannibal while discussing miscellaneous topics
John Scalzi’s Whatever
MetaWatershed, Maggie Jochild’s views
Michael Berube, academic superstar cultural studies professor
Richard Howland-Bolton’s radio essays
The Sneeze, “half blog, half zine, half not good with fractions”
Susan Stinson, novelist, essayist, and person who wishes so many people weren’t uptight about body weight
Susie Bright’s Journal
This So-Called Post-Post-Racial Life, “Life, Culture, and Politics in the Obama Age”
What the Hedgehog Sang, Henning Makholm on politics, language, comics, and other stuff.
Zompist, Mark Rosenfelder’s Metaverse
Miscellaneous
Ancient World Bloggers Group
Barry Ritholtz, finance and economics
Damn You Autocorrect!, automated miscorrections
DVZine, why the Dvorak keyboard should be standard, why QWERTY is standard, and what we can do about it
Geocurrents, geographers show us what their discipline can teach us about the news of the day
I Used to Believe, the childhood beliefs website
The Irving Babbitt Project of the National Humanities Institute
Malcolm Gladwell Book Generator
Nearly Rhymes, phrases that nearly rhyme mixed with some that do rhyme
Open Container II, Doc Haagen-Dazs on sailing
Patricia E. Bauer, better known as “Disability Bitch”
Permissible Arms, mostly about military affairs
Pictures of Muslims Wearing Things, how much “garb” do 1.2 billion people need, anyway?
Rogue Classicism, a blogger trapped in “an abnormal state or condition resulting from the forced migration from a lengthy Classical education into a profoundly unClassical world”
Schneier on Security

Language and Linguistics


(This page last updated 10 April 2010)
Arnold Zwicky’s blog
Fritinancy, Nancy Friedman on naming, words, and linguistics
The Greenbelt, “Language Liberalism Freethought Birds”
John McWhorter, who holds more academic titles than I own pairs of socks
Language Continuity, Jesus Sanchis thinks many historical linguists are clinging to outmoded ideas
Language Hat, not exclusively concerned with the language of hats, or with hats as language
Language Log, a blog maintained by linguists
The Language of Food, food vocabulary analyzed by linguist Dan Jurafsky
Language on the Move, “Language Learning, Multilingualism, Intercultural Communication” surveyed by Ingrid Piller
The Lexicographer’s Rules, by Grant Barrett
The Lousy Linguist, which is not at all lousy
My First Dictionary, which is what Ambrose Bierce might have written had he been alive and reading children’s books in the 1950s 
Paleoglot, mainly about the reconstruction of Indo-European and early Aegean languages
Ukulele and Languages
Visual Thesaurus/ Word Routes
World Wide Words

News


(This page last updated 11 July 2010)


Antiwar.com, aggregator and blog maintained by right-wing peaceniks
Arts & Letters Daily
BagNewsNotes, news photos analyzed
BBC News
CNN
Ha’aretz
The Independent
National Public Radio News
News of the Weird, compiled by Chuck Shepherd
The New York Times, for what it’s worth
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Politico, US politics
Raw Story, investigative news and politics
San Jose Mercury News
Science Daily
Science Now, in case you’re too impatient for Science Daily
TomDispatch, “a regular antidote to the mainstream media”
Truthdig, “drilling beneath the headlines”
War is Boring, David Axe and associates report on military affairs

Periodicals and Web Magazines

(This page most recently updated 9 May 2010)
Periodicals
The American Conservative, voices from the antiwar Right
Ancient Warfare, “devoted to all aspects of warfare in the ancient world”
The Atlantic Monthly, respectable opinion since the 1850s
Chronicles, laments the decline of the peasantry
Counterpunch, tells the facts and names the names
The Funny Times, cartoons, humor columns, etc
The Journal of Academic Freedom, a publication of the American Association of University Professors
The Nation, a leading publication of the American Left
Old Magazine Articles, ”a primary source website… designed to serve as a reference for students, educators, authors, researchers, dabblers, dilettantes, hacks and the merely curious”
Quaker Life- the magazine, not the breakfast cereal
Telos- it started in 1968 as a Marxist journal, and has moved off in an entirely unexpected direction
Web Magazines
The Daily Beast, US politics and corporate gossip
The Huffington Post- US politics & celebrity gossip
Quiche Moraine, three Minnesotans
Salon
Slate
SMITH, the home of “Six Word Memoirs”
Taki’s Magazine, which is not for the squeamish

Pictures, Artists, and Art Blogs

(This page most recently updated 9 May 2011)
Pictures
Amy Crehore, an artist fascinated by ukuleles
The Artist and His Model, an online arts collective
Astronomy Picture of the Day
Atompunk, some of the feverish sides of pop culture in the USA in the Cold War years
Discovery School, clip art licensed from the Clip Art Gallery on DiscoverySchool.com
Flickr’s Commons
The Harvey Kurtzman Collection.
Kevin Van Aelst, technological objects arranged in organic forms
Men Who Look Like Old Lesbians (Call it stereotyping, but look at the pictures and tell me you don’t see what she’s getting at)
Parenthetically- it’s subtitle asks “(what is this?)”  It’s several things, for example a startling way of looking at the consequences of industrialization.
Pattern for Plunder, always thought-provoking, usually nsfw
Plan59, images from North American magazine advertisements of the mid-20th century.
The Richard Heller Gallery of Contemporary Art
The Royal Collection, where the Queen of England tries to impress us by showing off a lot of stuff she has around the house.
Strange Maps
Weirdomatic, offbeat photo galleries
Wouldn’t You Like to See Something Strange?
Artists and Art Blogs
Amy Crehore’s Little Hokum Rag
Bent Objects, not someone named Bent who objects to things, but an artist who works with objects that have increased in angularity
Christophe Gilbert, who created this image
Donovan Beeson’s Intangible blog
Liquid Sculpture, Martin Waugh’s water drop art
Liza Cowan, painter, illustrator, and photographer, who will get you thinking deep thoughts
Mrs FloweryApron, who summarizes her technique thus: ”I draw pictures with a pencil on a piece of paper, then I put them onto a computer and colour them in”
Munithor, by friend of the blog Simone Brusca.  It’s mostly about comics, and entirely in Italian.  For convenience, he’s put flag icons on the site you can click for Google’s English, French, or German language translations.
Pam Isherwood, photographer
Sara Matos, Portuguese photojournalist with an interesting style of portraiture
Scott Moore, whom some will call cheesy
See Saw, Liza Cowan’s site for her gallery, Pine Street Art Works in Burlington, Vermont
Sexuality in the Arts, which didn’t seem at all creepy until I found out its author was a man
View on Canadian Art, critic Andrea Carson

Political Blogs

(This page was most recently updated 30 September 2011)
Feel free to use the comments to suggest other sites we should link on this page, especially to lighten the heavy predominance of USA-focused sites.
Political science and campaign news: The Monkey Cage, introducing political science research and the styles of thinking that it engenders to the general reader; A Shrewdness of Apes, Canadian political scientist Peter Loewen’s observations;  538, “Politics Done Right”; Wonkette, politics for people with dirty minds; Polls and Votes, “polls in perspective”; You Study Politics, Right?, “the politics of science and religion, the religion and science of politics”; Enik Rising, “politics, popular culture, and pastries”
Left: Alyssa Rosenberg, culture and society; The Angry Arab News Service, “a source on politics, war, the Middle East, Arabic poetry, and art”; Bitch PhD, a misleading title- you might expect one person who is ill-humored and boastful about her education, when in fact the blog is written by several people, none of whom meets that description; Box Turtle Bulletin, what happens when members of sexual minorities demand their rights; Digby’s Hullabaloo, an outlet for Americans frustrated that the center-left isn’t particularly effective in US politics; Echidne of the Snakes, notable for many things, including a formidable blogroll; Feministing; the Field Negro, for whom “silence is never golden”; Glenn Greenwald of Salon magazine; Juan Cole, “Informed Comment” on the Middle East and Central Asia; Katha Pollitt of The Nation magazine; Mondoweiss, mostly about Israel/ Palestine; Naked Capitalism, left-wing economic views; Racialicious, “the intersection of race and pop culture”;  Sadly, No!,  showing that political satire is not necessary when you can just quote American rightists; Tenured Radical, who takes pains to ensure that everyone recognizes the title of her first-rate blog as a reference to a second-rate book; TomDispatch, “a regular antidote to the mainstream media”; Truthdig, “drilling beneath the headlines”; Truth-Out, “fearless, independent news and opinion”; the Utne blog
Right: Anti-Gnostic, who is at least as fiercely reactionary in his opinions on politics, religion, and economics as was his hero, philosopher Eric Voegelin, but is much more readable than Voegelin ever was; The Imaginative Conservative, “a forum for those who seek the True, the Good, and the Beautiful”; Justin Raimondo, libertarian editor of antiwar.com, inhabits the place where the Old Right meets the New Left; Peter Hitchens is convinced that British voters would rally to support a conservative party, if only the Conservative Party would disband; Secular Right, proving you don’t have to be religious to be right-wing; Steve Sailer- I know, I know, but he posts lots of interesting stuff; The Volokh Conspiracy, right-wing legal scholars; Will Wilkinson, for low-tax liberalism (he also maintains The Moral Sciences Club)
Center: Brian Barder, a retired diplomat who may well be the most polite blogger on the web;  Crooked Timber, by authors who may all be of similar political persuasions, but whose academic research leads them in surprising directions;  Pat Lang, a retired colonel who knows a lot of stuff
Democrats and Republicans: Bruce Bartlett, Republican economist; Charles Colson once declared he would walk over his grandmother for Richard Nixon, but then had a religious awakening.  As one of his fellow Watergate figures said, “If he’d walk over his grandmother for Richard Nixon, imagine what he’ll do for Jesus”; Ernest F. Hollings, Acilius’ favorite former US Senator; Kevin Drum, who beats steadily for the Dems;  Matt Yglesias, who likes the Democrats; Michael Barone, Republican political analyst; Mickey Kaus, who dislikes unions because they drive up wages, and dislikes immigration because it drives down wages; Roger Ebert, celebrated film critic who is sensitive to the political side of movies and the cinematic side of politics; Secular Square, irreligious rightist;  Stanley Fish, academic eminence and canny observer of public affairs; View from the Right, by Lawrence Auster; The Weekly Standard‘s Daily Standard

Reference

(Most recently updated 30 April 2010)
A collection of searchable corpuses (or corpora) of English words
Backtype, what’s happening on the Woldwide Web
Bryn Mawr Classical Review, recent volumes in Classical Studies
The Fallacy Files
The Internet Classics Archive, MIT’s collection of Greek and Latin texts
The Internet Movie Database
The Latin Library, a collection of online texts
Mr Breakfast, recipes for what some regard as the most important meal of the day
Onelook Dictionary Search, indexes several hundred online English dictionaries
Snopes, urban legends fact-checked
TV Tropes, what they always do on TV
US Election Atlas, by Dave Leip
Webtender, recipes for cocktails, which some regard as the most important meal of the day
A catalog titled “Women’s Periodicals from 1968 to Present
Wordcount, the 84,800 most common words in the British National Corpus
The World Values Survey, what people in 99 countries think about stuff

Religion


(This page was most recently updated on 16 September 2011)
Our own religion section
Atheist Nexus, social networking and discussion forums for the godless
Eve Tushnet, who is a pious Roman Catholic, a secular Jew, a conservative, a lesbian, a Yale grad, and a native of Washington, DC.
The Friendly Atheist, who often says things like “perhaps you’re not fully god free until you are also free of the importance of getting others to be god free
Inward/Outward, each day a brief, provocative statement of Christian ethics, drawn from writers past and present
Gay Catholic Priests, by the Rev. Dr. Richard Wagner (I don’t believe he’s any relation to the composer)
Johan Maurer, formerly a bigshot in the world of Quakerism, now an English teacher in Elektrostal, Russia (he also has a page here)
John Wilkins’ postings about agnosticism
Linda Wilk claims to have had bad experiences with Christians and good experiences with Christ
The Long Black Veil and Life Within It,”  by Kashmir’s greatest fan of P. G. Wodehouse, Sabbah Haji.  Not exactly about religion, but she will shatter every stereotype you’ve ever had of a hijab-clad Muslim woman
Mark P. Shea is “Catholic and Enjoying It!”  If you doubt such a combination is possible, have a look- he does seem to be extremely cheerful.
Mormon Metaphysics
Notes on Arab Orthodoxy, Orthodox Christianity in the Arab world, both as practiced under the authority of the traditional patriachates and of missionary churches there
Quakerquaker, an online community which Martin Kelley started after he began ”The Quaker Ranter,” but before he started QuackQuack
Rickshaw Diaries, notes from Baraka, a Pakistani-American woman who practices Islam, raises a newborn, and advocates for peace in San Francisco
Secular Right, proving you don’t have to be left-wing to be irreligious

Science


(This page most recently updated 8 April 2011)
Since people are saying that this blog is a good source of news about science (well, okay, only one person has said that, but she’s very smart,) it seems right that  there should be a page of links to science news and blogs.
Our own science section
Afarensis99, “anthropology, evolution, and science,” with a blogroll that includes dozens of anthropologically-oriented websites
Andrew Gelman, “statistical modeling, causal inference, and social science.”  In other words, lots of fun little squibs about stuff in the news.
Astronomy Picture of the Day
Blog Around the Clock, chronobiologist “Coturnix” on clocks, animate and inanimate, freestanding and collective
Built on Facts, Matt Springer, physics grad student by day and champion of Enlightenment values by night
Colin Schultz, Canadian science journalist.  He conducts very good interviews with scientists, journalists, and science journalists for his blog.
Discover Magazine
E Science News
Geocurrents
Greg Laden, who shows us what Acilius means when he says that anthropology is a field that attracts megalomaniacs
Guilty Planet, Jennifer Jacquet on climatology, the relation between science and humanities, and other topics; hasn’t updated in a while
The Hubble Site
John Hawks, mostly about biology and physical anthropology
Junk Charts, “recycling chartjunk as junk art”
Language Log, a blog maintained by linguists
Not Exactly Rocket Science, may occasionally hint at rocket science
The Periodic Table of Videos
Pharyngula, “evolution, development, and random biological ejaculations from a godless liberal”
PLoS One, “accelerating the publication of peer-reviewed science”
Science Daily, aggregator maintained by the Chronicle of Higher Education
Science Now, a service of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Science sections of the Independent, the BBC, the New York Times, and NPR, each of which has its strengths
Scientific American magazine
Statistics Forum blog
Strange Maps
Talk Like a Physicist, cartoons, tattoos, and other stuff involving references to physics
3quarksdaily, a filter blog with a number of science-minded editors

Ukulele


(This page most recently updated 8 April 2011)
Ukulele Acts
The Bobby McGees on myspace
Bosko and Honey‘s Home Page
Herman Vandecauter’s Fine Art Ukulele
Howlin’ Hobbit Dot Com
I am Jem Cooke- well, I’m not, but she is
Ken Middleton
Langley Ukulele Ensemble, music teacher Peter Luongo shows that early adolescence can be a productive time if you are Canadian and someone gives you a uke
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain, their website.   See also their collective myspace page, their Twitter feed, and their YouTube Channel.  And individual myspace pages for Hester Goodman (also her YouTube channel,) Will Grove-White, Peter Brooke Turner (as “Tony Penultimate,”) and Dave Suich (as Joe Bazouki of San Bazoukistan and the Missing Puddings.)  And stand-alone websites for Tony Penultimate and Will Grove-White.  And UOGB Fans, their chief fansite.  And any number of videos posted on YouTube, especially by their friend Lizard on Uke.
Victoria Vox, on myspace, Facebook, youtube, Twitter, tumblr, and her homepage.
Ukelele Blogs
The Backward Ukulele Player, a.k.a. Reyalp Eleluku
Classical Ukulele, the ukulele as an instrument of the classical repertoire
Humble Uker Ramblings
JazzUkes, “A Big Band on Four Strings,” by Mark Occhionero
Play Ukulele by Ear, “Website of Instructor Jim d’Ville”
Uke Attitude, very clever material, mostly en francais
Uke Crazy Bitches, some talented players
Uke, Ubu, Uke!, Marcus Anderson’s uke blog
Uke Republic, “news, reviews, and events” from Atlanta, Georgia’s foremost ukulele dealership
Ukulelia, focuses on the unusual
Ukulele Brasil
Ukulele Hunt, the premier ukulele site of the moment, maintained by Al Wood.  See also Al’s myspace page and his Delicious links.
Ukulele Misfit, Toronto-based art student’s “blog combines all of my loves, ukulele, design, art, films, fashion, and randomness!”
Ukulele Secrets, by Tim Keough, aka UkuleleTim
Ukulele Perspective
Ukelele Clubs and Discussion Boards
Thai Ukulele Lovers Club
Ukulele Club of France
Ukulele Clubs Around the World
Ukulele Cosmos, discussion boards for ukers
Ukulele Underground
Ukulele Lessons and Tools for Ukers
Dominator’s Ukulele Tabs, certainly dominates other tab sites
North Carolina Ukulele Academy’s Online Ukulele Tuner- if you’re a one-finger uker, it’s as good as an instrument
Online Ukulele Tuner- a simpler tool than the North Carolina one
Top 50 Ukulele Sites- a very eccentric selection, but it includes some good items
Ukulele Daily, tabs, chords, etc
Ukulele Lessons from Pineapple Pete’s Uke School
Ukulele Hunt’s reader-contributed Uker Tabs, and tabs that Al Wood has posted there himself
How to make a humidifier for your ukulele
Ukulele Review- reviews of instruments, accessories, and other stuff ukers buy
Classical Tabs for the Ukulele, which will appeal to the ambitious
Ukulele Tabs, a user-generated compilation
Ukulele Videos and Regular Shows
Corktown Ukulele Jam, Toronto’s finest
Midnight Ukulele Disco, a local NYC TV show about our favorite instrument
The New York Ukulele Cabaret, not excessively talent-centric
Ukulele and Languages, videos of people singing in various languages, accompanied by the ukulele.
Uketoob, performance videos from around the Web
Acilius has subscribed to a bunch of YouTube channels, most of them ukulele-themed.
Two YouTube videos:
Lovebug, by Anna van Riel
I Will Never Love You More, by SoKo