Main

related bits

0

processing priority

4

site type

3 (personal blog or private political site, e.g. Blogspot, Substack, also small blogs on own domains)

review version

11

html import

20 (imported)

Events

first seen date

2024-11-14 13:21:52

expired found date

-

created at

2024-11-14 13:21:52

updated at

2026-02-22 02:17:09

Domain name statistics

length

23

crc

6044

tld

2211

nm parts

0

nm random digits

0

nm rare letters

0

Connections

is subdomain of id

69893241 (blogspot.com)

previous id

0

replaced with id

0

related id

-

dns primary id

0

dns alternative id

0

lifecycle status

0 (unclassified, or currently active)

Subdomains and pages

deleted subdomains

0

page imported products

0

page imported random

0

page imported parking

0

Error counters

count skipped due to recent timeouts on the same server IP

0

count content received but rejected due to 11-799

0

count dns errors

0

count cert errors

0

count timeouts

0

count http 429

0

count http 404

0

count http 403

0

count http 5xx

0

next operation date

-

Server

server bits

server ip

-

Mainpage statistics

mp import status

20

mp rejected date

-

mp saved date

-

mp size orig

178660

mp size raw text

75294

mp inner links count

63

mp inner links status

20 (imported)

Open Graph

title

icecrawler/heelwalker

description

image

site name

author

updated

2026-02-16 19:02:20

raw text

icecrawler/heelwalker skip to main | skip to sidebar icecrawler/heelwalker Friday, December 23, 2016 If others start playing the game I Popular culture picks its topics not randomly but nevertheless rather unpredictably. We’ve read two books utilising the history of classic surrealism as a topic. Of course, there are elements of sensationalism and mystification in all of popular culture’s exploits, but it is hardly more exploitational than academic recuperation of the same themes, no, in a substantial sense far less, at least for a large number of examples. Some of you will have heard about China Miéville’s ”Last Days of New Paris” (2016). (A discussion from the surrealist viewpoint by Jason Abdelhadi turned up at the Peculiar Mormyrid blog. )  China Miéville is a British writer of popular genre fiction, one of many ex- or quasi- political activists turned literary hacks, and for anyone who doesn’t mind entertainment literature, his various novels, which are basically e...

Text analysis

redirect type

0 (-)

block type

0 (no issues)

detected language

1 (English)

category id

227

index version

2025123101

spam phrases

0

Text statistics

text nonlatin

0

text cyrillic

0

text characters

60031

text words

11639

text unique words

2845

text lines

575

text sentences

375

text paragraphs

106

text words per sentence

31

text matched phrases

11

text matched dictionaries

16

RSS

rss status

32 (unknown)

rss found date

2024-11-14 13:21:53

rss size orig

267877

rss items

25

rss spam phrases

1

rss detected language

1 (English)

inbefore feed id

-

inbefore status

0 (new)

Sitemap

sitemap status

40 (completed successful import of reports.txt file to table in_pages)

sitemap review version

2

sitemap urls count

199

sitemap urls adult

0

sitemap filtered products

0

sitemap filtered videos

0

sitemap found date

2024-11-14 13:21:52

sitemap process date

2024-12-10 01:22:39

sitemap first import date

-

sitemap last import date

2025-10-16 06:07:06