Dude, who even knows.

30th December 2019

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Tagged: 2019

28th December 2019

Post reblogged from On Not Living in the End Times with 460 notes

notallmensheviks:

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from the hollow emptiness that consumes my soul one word rings out: “nice”

Tagged: 2019

20th December 2019

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Oh, let’s talk about the children’s movie previews I saw before Cats:

Harrison Ford and a Dog - I’m sorry dude, even if he does seemed trained so his reaction gestures aren’t that broad, you’re co-starring in a kids’ movie with a dog, and the story beats sound blunt as hell. No one you care about will even notice and you’ll use the paycheck to build a weed plantation on a Colorado mountaintop, though.

Movie where a tough Russian-ish spy mook has to mentor a little girl - still really cliche and treacly in a way I have to assume is pitched more to earnest parents. If this is the alternative I prefer the Shrek-style dumb knowingness over this dumb carebear shit, but I guess that’s my thesis on culture in general for the last few years.

Dr. Doolittle (with RDJ) - when I saw the title I was like “oh yes, that classic British kids’ property, where… ah… yes, animals! Where he does… some verbs… with animals!” The bit where the whole trailer’s all appealing to parents like “sense of wonder! an authority figure saying it’s okay to be scared!” and then a 3 second tag for boys “look, intense music and a dragon!"…

Lin-Manuel Maranda movie about the "dreamers” of Washington Heights defending themselves from evil gentrificationers, the dialogue was wretch-inducing diversity cliches - I rolled my eyes so hard and repeatedly I had to close them. It did highlight that all those “we gotta save our scrappy camp from the snobs across the lake!” stuff was narrativizing the white ethnic breakup of WASP hegemony, even tho by then WASPs were more outdoor-enthusiast totebaggers driving Volvos into the ground. Sorry, WASPs.

Trolls - from a culture war standpoint, this is more interesting. It opens with like, the Techno Troll as rave DJ playing Daft Punk’s One More Time, which 1) ugh 2) alllll flashing colors 3) sets up a hilarious contrast with Interstella 555

But then it turns out the plot is the Rock Troll (a mohawked-denim 80s type) is the villain, trying to claim the “5 strings” of music to secure supremacy. So at least… the Rap Troll and the Smooth Jazz Troll have to stop her?

I’m sure the climax is she thought she had to do this to survive and there’s some sort of reconciliation, probably as a loud party, but that “Rock is the oppressive villain Rap and Smooth Jazz have to defeat” is a viable take for youth media, hm.

Of course it looks excruciating, I hear the Angry Birds movie was interestingly xenophobic, but I’m not gonna watch that either.

New Pixar Movie – unlike the others looks quite competent in that Pixar way. Don’t approve of feelings for your dead relatives, esp. ones you never even met and I wish they didn’t apply their competence to that low shit, so. Speaking of Rock, is “fat friendly denim-jacket-and-patches guy with an airbrushed van” still a meaningful type to anyone? I feel like I’ve only ever encountered him in representations, like Brütal Legend and Day of the Tentacle, I’ve never actually met that guy in person

Tagged: 2019

20th December 2019

Post with 62 notes

Cats was as batshit as they say and it was great, very specifically true to the spirit of 1981 London musical theater taking on prewar London

The only part I thought didnt work was the fight scene on the trash barge with Ian McKellen and Rebel Wilson

OK and the Jenny Anydots musical production with the human-faced cockroaches she kept eating, ngl that was weird but it opens the film with a decent nod to an earlier Bubsy Berkeley tradition of adapting stage musicals to film

They do a better job of rescuing incoherent source material than any movie since Resident Evil – with a bit of dialogue, scene changes, and close-ups, they stitch it into viable mechanical (Macavity plots to steal the Choice!) and emotional (Mr. Mistoffelees gets confidence and saves Deuteronomy, Victoria joins the Jellicles and saves/sets up Grizabella, they end up together) arcs

Judi Dench, Ian McKellen, and Taylor Swift are transparently enjoying the hell out of themselves

It is, in fact, the horniest movie I’ve ever sat through previews of treacly kids’ movies (Harrison Ford co-starring with a dog!) before.

The Taylor Swift performance of “Macavity” was a very Taylor Swift performance, showing off her standard vocal tricks, aspirating her leads and weighting her vowels and then swapping into a British accent for a line. For all that, it probably departs from the stage Original Cast Recording least of any take in the movie.

By contrast, the Taylor Swift-written song is like the most Taylor Swift song, uses all her standard writing tricks and her little-poor-me outside-looking-in perspective. Not to mention it is the defining song for Victoria, the new central viewpoint character (and Taylor is clearly ventriloquizing her vocal approach), so it claims basically the entire movie for her, specifically appropriates Grizabella’s pathos for herself, and steps on the last line of Memory with a callback.

So, it is the most Taylor Swift song.

(Her role here probably counts as some of that U.K. market-specific fanservice I’ve mentioned, too)

Tagged: cats 2019taylor swift2019

15th December 2019

Post reblogged from Interdimensional Isolate with 77 notes

闯 Chuǎng – Why are informed Beijingers increasingly baffled by the struggle in Hong Kong? – 10 October 2019

unfettered-editions:

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correspondence in Chuang from a reader about shifting attitudes among white-collar workers in Beijing towards the situation in Hong Kong. A lot seems to have to do with media control and the highly monitored flow and interpretation of information, coupled with resurgent nationalist sentiment. Similar phenomena could surely be found in other territories where states and ruling classes have a vested interest in quelling sympathy for revolt elsewhere in the populations they control, pitting people against people along lines of division (in the border, in identity, in opportunity, etc.), or using rhetorics of subsumption to justify assimilationist policies that preserve the status quo. This is a chilling read when taken in consideration with questions of transnational solidarity and liberatory horizons for movements coming and underway that have been posed in preceding zines.

READ | PRINT

“It is now clear that many of my friends and colleagues who once kept an open mind about protests, or were perhaps only curious about the novel mass protests, are decidedly on the side of the central government against Hong Kong. What I have found particularly alarming is the loss of any sense of subtlety, or desire to understand the intricacies of the situation. Some have clamped down hard on easy to understand, pithy ideas. I hear them say things like: ‘well, Hongkongers have decided on independence, so they have all crossed the line. They are beyond reason.’ Many of my friends have often been openly critical of the CCP in the past, and stray from the party line on any number of controversial issues, like Xinjiang’s camps, or the ever-expanding police state, with its Great Firewall and surveillance cameras on every street corner. Recently, however, at least on Hong Kong, it seems that when push comes to shove, some have retreated to a sort of raw nationalism, defending some idea of Chinese-ness. The desecration of symbols like Chinese national flags, or the booing at the Chinese national anthem quickly became topics of discussion at the office water cooler, as they were circulated widely on WeChat. ‘The mistake these Hongkongers make is that they forget they are Chinese. They are becoming racist, and hateful of their own homeland, and that is just unacceptable,’ said one. Of course, examples of rising hatred against Hong Kongers in the mainland were not circulated on WeChat, like the beating of a Hong Kong hockey club at a tournament in Shenzhen, after they won over a mainland opponent. ‘I think the only way out of this situation is for Hong Kong to be returned to China a second time,’ said another, referring to the 1997 handover of the city, a former colony of Britain.“

Tagged: 2019

13th December 2019

Photoset reblogged from Baconmancer with 132,549 notes

butt-princess:

jaehaerys1:

ariestaurus21:

sassyintern:

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I. AM DYING.

Dead. TOTALLY. DEAD

This is a thousand times worse than that 2012 potterheads grab your wands superwholock bullshit

YAY CORPORATION

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Tagged: 2019

11th December 2019

Photo reblogged from Baconmancer with 601 notes

Tagged: 2019election 2020

25th November 2019

Post with 14 notes

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Tagged: 2019election 2020

Source: mobile.twitter.com

21st November 2019

Post reblogged from Baconmancer with 21,378 notes

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Tagged: 2019

5th November 2019

Post reblogged from Norse Coyote with 232 notes

norsecoyote:

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ponteh2dhh1ksdiwesph2tres:

when I lived in New York I decided to see if I could pass myself off as a traditional but apolitical Christian despite knowing next to nothing about Christianity, and it’s surprisingly easy, at least in New York

…I would imagine so, given that your standard traditional-but-apolitical Christian also knows next to nothing about Christianity, especially in the US.

Do they not? (Maybe if you don’t count Protestantism as Christianity, or if you do count Unitarianism, but Bible study classes seem pretty common.)

I mean I wouldn’t know any more about christianity if I hadn’t decided to be an atheist. I went to sunday school when I was a little kid but not as a medium kid. I went to church roughly 2x per year as a christian, so.

In my freshman dorm a hallmate heard weird sounds next door and it turned out to be our RA and her bible study group trying to cast out demons of someone’s spinal pain

And she gave him like a Baby’s First Evangelism guide to what they were doing and honestly this was what he hung up on, “does she think I don’t know who Jesus was?”

She probably came from a kinda bubbled missionary tradition and he was Asian maybe, tho on an Ivy League campus it was the Asians most likely to have a Christian identity

Also I took a history of American Protestantism course and in doing one take-home exam question interpreting a sermon on slavery I cited Matthew Henry’s biblical commentary, and a week after a TA pulled me aside after class and gently asked if I was a Christian

I wasn’t and I don’t know if she was but she made clear that as someone who engaged with American Christianity at a postgrad level she was astounded by the share of students in the class who were but didn’t know shit about it, who had a strong identity that was scripturally ignorant Real Mericanism that was even Americanally sophomoric, that a lot of the responses hadn’t even noticed the biblical references and tried to bullshit it as connecting to a Black uplift tradition that happened decades after the sermon and regularly confused Booker T. Washington with W.E.B. DuBois

I teach a philosophy class to high school seniors in a fairly affluent Silicon Valley suburb, which means that my students are like ½ Indian and 1/3 Chinese but almost all grown up in modern American West Coast culture.

A few weeks ago, most of the way through our unit on the Divine Arguments, one class ground to an absolute screeching halt because I referred offhandedly to Jesus being God, and it turned out that the vast majority of the class had never heard this before.

Like they knew of Jesus, that he was the son of God, sure, but I had 17- and 18-year old students genuinely saying that their minds had just been blown by this revelatory information.

I don’t know what the moral of this story is.

Tagged: 2019trinitarianism