wjrii

joined 9 months ago
MODERATOR OF
cad
[–] wjrii 3 points 2 days ago

I don't think it helped that, at least at that point in his career, Anthony Montgomery was simply a bad-to-meh actor. I think they maybe saw a wide-eyed optimism that they liked in the audition or something, but his line-readings were often school-play amateurish, to say nothing of communicating any lifelike emotion or pulling off the "I'm young but I've seen more shit than most of you" vibe a boomer was supposed to have. The episode on his old ship should have been really powerful, but it just sort of fizzled.

Padma Lakshmi was better. There. I said it.

[–] wjrii 1 points 2 days ago

I don't know why, but Glen Powell always makes me think of a wish.com Ed Norton who's being treated like a wish.com Brad Pitt.

So I guess yeah, he's a wish.com Tyler Durden.

[–] wjrii 2 points 2 days ago

Jeff Daniels was great in Gettysburg. And, if it glossed over the entire reason for the war, at least it showed Lee being an overconfident moron who wouldn't listen to Longstreet and had Chamberlain and Buford as its big heroes.

Gods and Generals... we don't talk about Gods and Generals.

[–] wjrii 3 points 2 days ago

Gotta trust the experts on something like this.

[–] wjrii 1 points 2 days ago
[–] wjrii 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Here's an interview with a good number of the paintings. Del's Jesus has BLUE EYES sometimes. 🙄

[–] wjrii 3 points 3 days ago

Learning to Fly is some peak Gilmour PF.

The video is... well... it definitely exists.

[–] wjrii 2 points 3 days ago

You're not wrong, but I was very much regretting my decision to search for giraffe centaurs at all, and Ms. Curly was a safe enough option with the proportions I was trying to communicate.

[–] wjrii 17 points 3 days ago (5 children)

It's almost like the "better" airlines already know how much you can shit on the customer base and survive. Pretty much everybody I know who has ever taken a Spirit flight has told me they never want to do it again.

[–] wjrii 7 points 3 days ago (4 children)

You're closer to right than you know. This is "The Olive Press" by (in)famous white-Jesus Mormon painter Del Parson. The man paints Jesus through a very, very thick lens of the American Mountain West.

For the record, I had to look up the specific painting, but I grew up LDS, and red-robe white-guy mullet Jesus is a Parson trademark.

[–] wjrii 3 points 3 days ago

Mastodon has a certain level of federated connectivity with Lemmy, but it's also a Twitter alternative, similar in that way to BlueSky. Lemmy (or mBin) is the Reddit alternative.

[–] wjrii 4 points 3 days ago

If it does work, though, it'll be pretty sweet.

77
The Tholian Reb (lemmy.world)
submitted 4 weeks ago by wjrii to c/tenforward
 
51
Pardon my French... (lemmy.world)
submitted 4 weeks ago by wjrii to c/tenforward
 
71
The old man says... (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 month ago by wjrii to c/tenforward
 
23
I like this, but... (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 month ago by wjrii to c/tenforward
 
47
Just right... (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 month ago by wjrii to c/tenforward
 
 

128/133 in 6:30. In defense of my knowledge, if not my wisdom...

spoilerODU and Kent State are the only two I truly forgot. I just straight up skimmed past UNC, then I misspelled Sam Houston and I still don't why it didn't take my answer for ULM

 

The mascot known as Boom ‘is really young and immature and crazy as hell’

 

They had the Herbstreit stinger in the can, ready for the first time they needed it. I'm sure of it!

No captions this week, best I can tell.

 

Scared money don't make money, right Billy?

Also, regardless of what happened, going to OT forced the nation to endure more of that mutual shitshow than was necessary.

 

I don't think they capture all the nuances of the craziness we see on this community, but it's a pretty decent and readable summary of where the SovCits are coming from, once you kind of "get it" for one variety, you start to see them more like insanity Jazz, with infinite riffs on core principles.

One "between the lines" part of this presentation is the stuff about SovCits being victims of scammers. This, along with sheer impatience and "path of least resistance" thinking, goes a long way in understanding why courts and government offices play along to the degree they do and try to find something even halfway of useful to say to them or do for them.

I believe the author is Andrew Logan Beveridge, Stevens Point City Attorney.

26
Star Trek Voyager Gothic (quasi-normalcy.tumblr.com)
submitted 1 month ago by wjrii to c/tenforward
 

Thought I'd give this one from 7 months ago a bump. Cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/12634612

‘Star Trek: Voyager’ Gothic

You’ve been on this tiny ship in the Delta Quadrant beyond any hope of recrew or resupply for over a year, but you keep seeing ensigns you don’t recognise. Everyone tells you that they’ve always been here

You go down to Engineering looking for Lt. Carey. B'elanna tells you that he’s just stepped out. He’s been 'just stepped out’ for days.

A shuttle crashes on a desert planet. You speak with Chakotay about the possibility of trading for some new shuttles, but he looks at you funny and says “but we already have a full compliment of shuttles”

You run to the shuttlebay and inspect them personally. There is a full compliment of shuttles. And none of them even have a scratch. The next week, a shuttle is torn to pieces in a plasma storm. You’re not even surprised when you find intact it in the shuttlebay an hour later.

You stop mentioning shuttles.

The ship has an encounter with some Kazon, but manages to get away. Their ships are primitive and slow and you shouldn’t run into them again.

Two weeks later, you meet the same Kazon, now somehow in front of you. You begin to suspect that you’re driving in circles

You go to Engineering looking for Lt. Carey. You haven’t seen him in two years. He’s 'not there right now, but should be back in a minute’.

Janeway and Paris travel at warp 10 and turn into salamanders. You’re sure that it happened. You remember it happening! But no one brings it up. When you ask Tom about it, he doesn’t even register the question.

You scream “BUT YOU WERE A SALAMANDER!” into his ear. He doesn’t even hear you.

You see another Ensign you don’t recognise. You finslly just ask the computer for the crew compliment of Voyager. You are told that the answer is: 121.

A month later, the Hirogen conquer the ship, spend weeks brainwashing and surgically altering the crew into believing that they are actually characters in holographic simulations, and then hunt them for sport. This culminates in a pitched battle between the crew and the Hirogen in which the ship is utterly wrecked and dozens of people are killed.

Afterwards, you ask the computer for the ship’s crew compliment. You are told that the answer is: 147

The next day, you wake up and find Voyager restored to its original state.

You make a discreet inquiry about Lt. Carey. Now everyone acts like he’s dead but can’t tell you precisely when or how.

The Captain takes you aside one day and specifically instructs you not to mention Ensign Jetal to the Doctor. She says that she knows that this will be difficult, given how close we all were to her (and you in particular), but that for the greater good of the crew, you need to act like Ensign Jetal never existed. You solemnly nod your head and consent, and she gives you a comradely pat on the shoulder and leaves the room.

You have absolutely no idea who Ensign Jetal is.

Voyager absorbs the remaining crew of the USS Equinox. Well at least you’ll finally have an explanation for the new crew you see around the ship! You never see any of them ever again.

You’ve now travelled almost 40,000 light years towards home. You check the star charts; somehow, you’re still in the Delta Quadrant. You begin to wonder if the Beta Quadrant even exists.

The Delta Flyer is destroyed by Borg torpedos. You don’t even bother to check the shuttlebay for it, you just instinctively know that it will be back

A few months later, the Captain gives you the sad news: Lt. Carey is dead.

You finally make it back to the Alpha Quadrant, say your tearful farewells, and receive a handshake and a promotion from Admiral Paris. As one last thought before leaving Voyager forever, you pay a visit to the shuttlebay. You find it utterly empty, except for one lowly crewman with a mop and pail, swabbing the deck. “I…guess that Starfleet must have already cleared out the remaining shuttles?” You say uncertainly, your voice echoing in the cavernous, empty room. The crewman breaks off his mopping and looks at you like you’ve lost your mind and says: “Voyager never had any shuttles.”

 

I currently run a Voxelab Aquila I got for $120 three years ago. It largely replaced a Monoprice Mini, and the Aquila's done some surprisingly good work for me, but I may look for something new to put on the ol' birthday list. I would like a flat bed and some modern QoL improvements built in (he said, side-eyeing the BLTouch clone he never installed), but I'm still looking to play in the shallow-end, price-wise, and anyway Bambu just has "future enshittification" written all over it. I don't do anything time-sensitive, and I'm not afraid to put the whole thing together, so who are the current leaders in the value space? Recent machines from Creality?

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