The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
that's absolutely true
appreciation of beauty or power changes a lot slower than appreciation of language
i mean look at henry james
imagine a world where PEOPLE HONESTLY TALK LIKE THAT
that's why it took so long to negotiate the peace of 1863
because everyone was a long-winded gasbag
what's interesting to me is when i was liek 15 i read lovecrafts survey of literature (whatever it is) and even he - EVEN HIM - said that most victorian era literature (specifically the limiting nature of the gothic tale) were boring horrible dogshit and there was almost no reason to ever read it
and he was the biggest sperglord of 1928
appreciation of beauty or power changes a lot slower than appreciation of language
i mean look at henry james
imagine a world where PEOPLE HONESTLY TALK LIKE THAT
that's why it took so long to negotiate the peace of 1863
because everyone was a long-winded gasbag
what's interesting to me is when i was liek 15 i read lovecrafts survey of literature (whatever it is) and even he - EVEN HIM - said that most victorian era literature (specifically the limiting nature of the gothic tale) were boring horrible dogshit and there was almost no reason to ever read it
and he was the biggest sperglord of 1928
- Nietzslime
- Give these people air!
- Posts: 491
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 4:57 am
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
yeah, well
yeah
i don't have much to add to your insight to be honest, partially because i'm tired of thinking and writing about the evolution of the prose story right now
all of this is obvious in hindsight to me
it was just a matter of getting some perspective, i guess
and i already have an english minor completed (if i finish this one class, i guess) so no loss there
yay for what you antepodeans refer to as sharehousing
yeah
i don't have much to add to your insight to be honest, partially because i'm tired of thinking and writing about the evolution of the prose story right now
all of this is obvious in hindsight to me
it was just a matter of getting some perspective, i guess
and i already have an english minor completed (if i finish this one class, i guess) so no loss there
yay for what you antepodeans refer to as sharehousing
Europe: Genocide-free since at least 1996.
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
did you enjoy your previous coursework in the area
i mean when you're studying it's easy to see it as work or a job to do and ignore whether it's actaully any good
i mean when you're studying it's easy to see it as work or a job to do and ignore whether it's actaully any good
- Nietzslime
- Give these people air!
- Posts: 491
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 4:57 am
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
i enjoyed english under a few circumstancesstarku wrote:did you enjoy your previous coursework in the area
i mean when you're studying it's easy to see it as work or a job to do and ignore whether it's actaully any good
1. creative writing was always fun, and i got positive reinforcement doing it since profs seemed to enjoy my work a lot
2. when the study area was legitimately cool, eg paradise lost
3. writing essays even on things that aren't great (such as some of milton's other work) was fun for some time because it was creative problem-solving where i could pull a bunch of theory, textual clues, and pure supposition together and invent an argument out of thin air. but after some time i realized that this kind of literal sophistry was ultimately unsatisfying
but as a whole, studying literary theory/ genre/ history/ etcetera, it really wasn't ever fun and i basically stayed in it out of pure inertia and by making my own fun
eg, in my literary theory class, i used every new critical theory we learned to prove that twilight was the greatest work of modern literature, making sure to note that i had not ever actually read twilight. my remarkable success in this venture is a good example of how doing #3 disillusioned english to me
edit: i think what happened is that i got into english through creative writing, which normally can't happen but i went straight into mid-level creative writing out of high school by going to the department directly
and though i realized soon that creative writing would only be a tiny, tiny fraction of the number of english classes i would take if i got an english major (and they were the only ones i was actually interested in)
i basically... just was kind of stupid and didn't think very clearly about my goals and my future and just took on more coursework because that seemed like the thing that people do, and as my peer group outside english recognized me as 'The english major guy who knows english' and i got a peer group inside english, i was blinded to the fact that i wasn't getting anything at all out of the experience
Europe: Genocide-free since at least 1996.
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
The weather channel is good viewing.
Foxtel makes that shit interactive.
Foxtel makes that shit interactive.
- Crazedwraith
- Posts: 831
- Joined: Tue Sep 27, 2011 11:25 am
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
you mean you get to pick and choose what weather you get today? Truly we are living in the future...
To the Brave passengers and crew of the Kobayashi Maru... Sucks to be you
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
man the state of pay for the healthcare industry is kind of depressing
looking through some of the salary data for healthcare jobs at work, it turns out that mental health therapists in denver don't even make $17 an hour for an entry level position
on top of that they require a master's degree
highly experienced therapists don't even crack $25
looking through some of the salary data for healthcare jobs at work, it turns out that mental health therapists in denver don't even make $17 an hour for an entry level position
on top of that they require a master's degree
highly experienced therapists don't even crack $25
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
what the chirst is this
- Nietzslime
- Give these people air!
- Posts: 491
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 4:57 am
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
is the man from the 90s really so hard to understand
Europe: Genocide-free since at least 1996.
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
look at him nos
LOOK AT HIM
really see him
what the FUKKK
LOOK AT HIM
really see him
what the FUKKK
- Nietzslime
- Give these people air!
- Posts: 491
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 4:57 am
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
he has the wearied expression of a man who has carried our sins for too long
but the luxurious, silken mane of one who bears all the weight of the world like a feather
he is a paradox
but the luxurious, silken mane of one who bears all the weight of the world like a feather
he is a paradox
Europe: Genocide-free since at least 1996.
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
look the point is he's clearly jesus
he wears his nihilist black crew-neck to cover the wound from the spear of destiny as seen in wolfenstien
brandon the jaded mandarin
he wears his nihilist black crew-neck to cover the wound from the spear of destiny as seen in wolfenstien
brandon the jaded mandarin
- Metatwaddle
- Posts: 101
- Joined: Sat Oct 15, 2011 4:00 am
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
i thought it was sad hipster kid rock
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
why does anyone care what a programmer thinks anyway
who knows the link doesn't work :V
who knows the link doesn't work :V
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
"really wants to be lemmy kilmister but can't pull it off"Metatwaddle wrote:i thought it was sad hipster kid rock
- Metatwaddle
- Posts: 101
- Joined: Sat Oct 15, 2011 4:00 am
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
i dunno, i think this lady has him beaten in the no1curr departmentstarku wrote:why does anyone care what a programmer thinks anyway
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
Man, spear of destiny. I still say Indiana Jones 4 should have been set in postwar Germany with Indy fighting Nazis trying to bring about the 4th Reich with the spear. The perfect setup for him being there is his identifying archeological shit stolen by the Nazis so it can be returned.starku wrote:look the point is he's clearly jesus
he wears his nihilist black crew-neck to cover the wound from the spear of destiny as seen in wolfenstien
brandon the jaded mandarin
- Bakustra
- Religious Fifth Columnist Who Hates Science, Especially Evolution
- Posts: 1216
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 12:32 pm
- Location: Wherever I go, there are nothing but punks like you.
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
That doesn't really fit with the underlying approach of the movies as they progress in chronological order- they go from paganism to Old-Testament Judaism to Christianity. New-age religions are a natural progression of that, but the spear of Longinus is explicitly Christian. So you'd be kicking away the thematic coherency.Flagg wrote:Man, spear of destiny. I still say Indiana Jones 4 should have been set in postwar Germany with Indy fighting Nazis trying to bring about the 4th Reich with the spear. The perfect setup for him being there is his identifying archeological shit stolen by the Nazis so it can be returned.starku wrote:look the point is he's clearly jesus
he wears his nihilist black crew-neck to cover the wound from the spear of destiny as seen in wolfenstien
brandon the jaded mandarin
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
So where do aliums fit?
- Bakustra
- Religious Fifth Columnist Who Hates Science, Especially Evolution
- Posts: 1216
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 12:32 pm
- Location: Wherever I go, there are nothing but punks like you.
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
The New Age. They're examples of modern mysticism and a modern religion, alongside psychic powers. KotCS didn't handle it well because the movie seemed to be crammed with various ideas that never quite panned out.Flagg wrote:So where do aliums fit?
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
quoted for awesomeiminitudestarku wrote:
that is the mang i wish i coul dbe
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
B-A-K-U-S-T-R-A wrote:The New Age. They're examples of modern mysticism and a modern religion, alongside psychic powers. KotCS didn't handle it well because the movie seemed to be crammed with various ideas that never quite panned out.Flagg wrote:So where do aliums fit?
Spear of destiny would have been cooler. Plus Nazis.
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
holy shit is his hair waist-lengthadr wrote:quoted for awesomeiminitudestarku wrote:
that is the mang i wish i coul dbe
- Nietzslime
- Give these people air!
- Posts: 491
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 4:57 am
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
preliminary research says yes
Europe: Genocide-free since at least 1996.
Re: The Testingtard's Lament: Boo-Hoo-in' Revolution
do you think that's why he's the face of wiki