She just means she doesn’t give a shit if people think she’s biased or corrupt.
he/him 🏳️🌈🚹🚺
solve et coagula ⛓️🏏🖤🫦
spooky stuff 👻🪦🕸️💀🎃
🏴☠️ 🎮👾☕⌨️🎞️📷📚⚛️
She just means she doesn’t give a shit if people think she’s biased or corrupt.
I thought it said antique and didn’t question that, either.
They see what they want to see.
History seems to agree. Seventy-five percent of films from the silent era have been lost forever. Television shares a similar fate.
When a new medium is created, it seems we don’t put much thought into preservation.
Shaders are lighter.
Every time a sequel or a comic book movie lands on its face, someone rewrites an article about franchise/superhero fatigue. And that’s been going on for over a decade.
People will show up to watch a good movie. Guardians 3 did really well. Spider-Man is the “same old stuff.” This is all cherry picking examples. Movies don’t do well when they’re bad or the star is unappealing somehow.
Hollywood will stop making these movies when people stop paying to see them.
I was just thinking about this today! I thought it was high time I dug out the old ones. I have to buy an adapter for the AV but these games were some of my favorites. Double Dash is still the best Mario Kart.
My childhood of Sesame Street and Transformers and Dr. Suess didn’t prepare me adequately for the horrors of humanity.
But at least I didn’t become a monkey torturer. So there’s that.
It’s interesting how some things have changed over the years when it comes to chat rooms. And how other things haven’t. When I first started in The Palace the internet was new, and chat rooms were for shut-ins, agoraphobes, and nerds. We basically lived on the internet. So it made sense to some to treat the room as a place you entered and left.
Now you can sit on a discord server on mobile and have a life, pop in the middle of a conversation somewhere and then leave it. And some servers still suggest you greet a room like you live there.
It’s like, when I was a kid, having internet access to all human knowledge, anywhere, would have been a divine gift. Now we all have computers in our pockets and some people still argue about basic facts that can be resolved instantly. We treat technology very strangely.