You also know somebody is running on empty when a show or movie franchise set in the future or a fantastic world transports their characters to "the present" for any extended period. Now, whether that's the writers, the cast, or the accountants, no one can say.
I love that podcast, and particularly when I'm driving, because while Kevin tends to repeat himself and speak slowly, it's generally pedagogically sound, somehow in the service of his point and ensuring I don't miss much if I get distracted. He's also an attorney (probate, IIRC), so when he occasionally drifts into legal stuff, it's doubly insightful.
Covid changed people’s relationship with movie theaters. I don’t think it can be explained better than that.
I'd say it drastically accelerated an existing trend, but absolutely. Lots of people finally got that 50+ inch LCD and at least a sound bar, and whaddaya know, 99% of the audience was never in love with the cinema as a ritual, they just wanted to see new shit on a big screen in a dark room with nice speakers, and the last three are probably still "nice-to-haves" for many. I have many of my own little personal rituals and quirky things that evoke meaning for me, but I'm not narcissistic (enough) to presume that my pet preferences are objectively the only way to experience whatever core activity they're tied to.
Only the movies that demand the biggest or benefit from a communal experience (Minecraft movie, K-Pop singalong) are going to be reliable performers in multiplexes. Large public screening rooms are simply settling into the use cases they actually serve best, like live theaters before them. It's no surprise that the decline of cinema-going is dovetailing with a massive expansion of IMAX screens.
If we lose self-contained A/V storytelling in a 2-3 hour format, I think that will be a terrible shame, but I have little sympathy for the "auteurs" who want to tell quiet stories about small people with nuanced visuals but think a commercially viable number of people will go sit in a threadbare public fart-muffler with sticky floors and try to time their piss breaks just-so, simply because that small story is showing on a big screen.
Poppycock. It's mispronounced German and Latin and Greek and French and... well... English, all with a delightful seasoning of mispronounced Dutch and Spanish.
That's a pretty slimy technicality.
Trump on immigrants in late 2023: “They let — I think the real number is 15, 16 million people into our country. When they do that, we got a lot of work to do. They’re poisoning the blood of our country.”
Kobach just last month on the Coldwater case: “It still effectively takes the vote away or cancels the vote of a U.S. citizen.”
Most town residents voted for these men. Whether they realize it or not, they’re getting what they wanted. On Election Day, they chose cruelty.
The worst part of this is that the actual guy getting deported should be the reason these yahoos see the light, but instead they just want to be special and not have their preferred "illegals" suffer the consequences they have brought down on so many others. Consequences are for the big city where the brown people are all evil and lazy drug-selling job-stealers, not Coldwater where the one brown guy is a sweetheart who makes sure to vote how his friends do. He seems like a genuinely decent, if utterly dim, person who's simply never known anything except this shitkicker town actually being fairly nice to him, and indeed if you "know your place" and don't present an economic threat or make them feel insecure about either of those first two things, many MAGAs will be perfectly pleasant to you.
She was his special education teacher in school [apparently he was very far behind and had poor English skills in a school that had no proper ESL program, and he was not a uniquely talented intellect who could overcome that]. This mess actually started, she said, when she took Ceballos and her other special education students to the Comanche County clerk’s office on a field trip. And there, she said, she actually played a role — which she now regrets — to get him mistakenly registered as a Kansas voter....
“That’s right,” Dennis Swayze said. “I was the one who drove him to Wichita when he was still a kid, to get him that first green card. He saw those words, ‘permanent resident,’ and thought that made him a citizen, and that was not true. So I partly blame myself. We should have brought this up and said it wasn’t enough. But there’s others who also should have been more on the ball. Where was the county clerk when he raised his hand about registering? The clerk should have asked too.”
[from the other article] After all, as Kobach pointed out: Elected officials in Kansas are required by law to be legal electors — meaning legally registered voters.
Then the guy's lawyer is giving everyone false hope, talking about how he didn't have intent to break the law. Unfortunately, that doesn't matter. There are two cliches you'll hear from Lawyer TV: "You have to have intent," and "Ignorance of the law is no excuse." They are not in contradiction, though it turns on lawyer hairsplitting. If you push a button that says "free candy" and it instead shoots an investment banker in the face, you haven't committed a crime, assuming the "button" wasn't suspiciously trigger-shaped or anything. If someone tells you that it's not murder to shoot an investment banker in the face, you still go to jail for murder if you shoot an investment banker in the face, because regardless of what you know about the law, you intended to shoot an investment banker in the face. You have other defenses, like entrapment, but that isn't nearly as easy to claim as people like to think, and getting back to this story, it has to go way beyond somebody else being stupid and herp-derping your illegal voter registration because a white guy was with you.
I think the Kansas Reflector writer actually summed it up very well:
As sure as if every Republican voter of Coldwater lined up to cast a stone at Ceballos, their choices at the ballot box in 2024 and 2022 had the same traumatic effect. They did this to their friend. They did this to their mayor. They did this to their beloved town fixture. And until they figure this out, our country and our state is not going to get better.
I have it on good authority that the Starbucks protein coffee gives you the double-shits.
Duval taking care of business. It would be generous to say that Tennessee is in the early stages of their rebuild. Woof.
STD will make you all warm and fuzzy.
If it's possible to feel sympathy for a process running a text-to-speech algorithm, then it would have to be for the one tasked with transcribing Donald Duck.
Unfortunate that Indiana Jones got hurt, but I do love seeing the return of OG Jellybean Jag.