Wandering_Uncertainty

joined 1 year ago
[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 3 points 4 months ago

This is so real it hurts...

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 8 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I think it's absolutely intentional. It feels like it's written by and targetted towards people who are viscerally repulsed by pedophilia.

It's creating a situation that feels like absolute horror, and using that revulsion to help sell the horror. This centuries old mind, trapped in a child's body, unable to properly experience things like sexually and romance, continually on the outside of everything, treated like a child despite her age and abilities...

If I remember correctly, she ends up being this extremely bitter murdering monstrosity, out of rage and spite over her existence. Despite her angelic, innocent face, she's the most evil of the lot. Partly because she doesn't even have the option of interacting with humans properly, and even most vampires treat her poorly.

And all because a character had a moment of moral panic, of pity for a poor child. A desire to do the right thing.

It's awful. And it's supposed to be.

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 10 points 4 months ago

This is so wholesome, especially in contrast. I love it!

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 11 points 4 months ago

I'm now envisioning a car wrecking its way into a house, and then trying to make cat sounds with its engine and stuff (the meows would be kinda hard, but whining would be easy enough) at the door of the restroom, and then the tires just squeal as it zooms away as the person opens the restroom door. I'm envisioning the sheer, overwhelming perplexity on their face.

I'm completely cracking up over this image. It's amazing.

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 13 points 5 months ago

The TumblrBot's response to the "do you want to be human" question made me crack up.

It's fantastic. A bit insulting, playful, charming - man, that's amazing. I'm going to be randomly giggling about that answer. Coming from an AI... haha!

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 3 points 5 months ago

A Link To The Past had the most magical feel of any master sword, I think.

Ocarina of Time was great, but it felt... almost like a religious artifact, if that makes sense. Whereas LTTP was just this sword in this exquisitely beautiful little grove, deep within a magical forest... it had a feeling of a legend being born that no other game has ever quite touched since. At least, for me!

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 2 points 5 months ago

Ospreys are so fucking cool! Those pictures are amazing. The intense focus, the smooth curve of the wings...

Birds of prey in general are just so beautiful. And badass. I love them!!!

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 4 points 5 months ago

The problem is, that's exactly what the ... is for. It is a little weird to our heads, granted, but it does allow the conversion. 0.33 is not the same thing as 0.333... The first is close to one third. The second one is one third. It's how we express things as a decimal that don't cleanly map to base ten. It may look funky, but it works.

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 5 points 5 months ago

???

Not sure what you're aiming for. It proves that the setup works, I suppose.

x = 0.555...

10x = 5.555...

10x = 5 + 0.555...

10x = 5+x

9x = 5

x = 5/9

5/9 = 0.555...

So it shows that this approach will indeed provide a result for x that matches what x is supposed to be.

Hopefully it helped?

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 1 points 5 months ago

Aww, thank you! :D

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 6 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

It's not a thing to change, though? I guess there's one aspect that might be addressable.

I don't enjoy sports, but I appreciate the skill and training that goes into it. No one could say anything that would make me enjoy watching any sports, but they could help me to appreciate it by better understanding the skills and stuff.

So if you don't like Doctor Who - same deal. It's a matter of taste, that's fine. If you don't understand what there is to like about it, that's all anyone could help you with.

Me, I only really like the first few sessions of the reboot, with the 9th and 10th Doctor, because I appreciate a little more depth in my stories.

Doctor Who appeals to so many people and a major reason for it is that it appeals on a number of different levels.

There's the escapism, of course. How many Whovians secretly (or not so secretly) wish they could hear the whine of the TARDIS's engines, see the Doctor, and be whisked away? To adventure, to incredible sights and experiences, to feeling like they matter. That brings me to the next point, but just here for a moment - that escapism is uniquely profound in Doctor Who. A huge number of fans would accept being the Doctor's companions, even knowing how badly it ends for so many of them. If I didn't have a kid to take care of, I'd be on that list myself - I'd take a short, full, meaningful life over this bullshit any day. Even if I'm dead in 6 months, for those six months I'd live more than a hundred years the way I am now.

There's also the simple, pure joy of following the adventure of someone who's just straight up a good guy. You can feel safe rooting for him, in your heart - he's going to try to do what's right, there's no mixed feelings about that. It's like a child's story that way. And yet, he's not just fighting cartoonish, childish enemies. Sometimes, yeah, but there's often nuance, moral complexity, hard choices.

Like the Pompeii episode where he had to decide whether to actively kill everyone in the town in order to save the world. And they didn't blow it off, it was a painful choice, he wasn't saved by a Deus ex machina at the end, he had to do it. He hurt for it - him and his companion Donna, they both strove to do what's right and made this terrible choice.

And yet, for all that heaviness that underlies so much of the show (and I swear, the writers love traumatizing the doctor), it still manages to be light-hearted and fun most of the time. Suitable to watch with your family.

It's real, and alive, and cheerful, and rich in a way so many shows aren't. It's fun and thought provoking.

Yes, it's incredibly stupid at times, no joke, and I'm not at all happy with some directions it took after the 10th. I finished Matt Smith's run and then stopped watching.

But there's something beautiful and deeply compelling about it for a great many people. Ah, to be whisked away to adventure and purpose! Wouldn't that just be brilliant?

Edit: I can't seem to figure out how to do spoilers on here...

[–] Wandering_Uncertainty 27 points 5 months ago (5 children)

You think that the statement "what LGBTQ+ says about x" is a comment that is possible to make sense?

"LGBTQ+" is not an organization. It's not a religion or a creed. It doesn't "say" anything - and, in fact, isn't even an "it" in the context you're using!

It's a term for a group of people that have nothing to do with each other, other than some shared traits. In your comment, replace "LGBTQ+" with another word for a group of unrelated humans. "Blondes," maybe, or "women," "men," "dark skinned folk," "humans," etc. You can't put something like "Americans" or "Christians" in that sentence, because those are too specific.

Can you see the problem now?

Is it fair to post a video of some random dude saying something stupid, and then say, "I have proof that men believe X"?

No, because "men" don't share a creed.

LGBTQ folk also don't share a creed. We're just people.

And I absolutely believe you'd hear some folks joking around about "coming for their children." A friend of mine jokes about the gay agenda all the time. Her gay agenda is "going to the grocery store to get milk." But someone could get a clip of her saying that she's got a gay agenda, easily.

And thing is, even if that video happened to be about some folks who weren't joking - it doesn't mean anything! Just because someone found some random assholes at pride doesn't mean that everyone who's LGBTQ+ has an agenda.

I'm probably wasting my time, I know, but I figured I'd put it out there just in case you are honestly misunderstanding the situation. Here's hoping.

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