So, on the subject of Batman, who here has seen the 60s Batman movie with Adam West? That movie is quite wonderful thanks to all the cheese. I love it.
So, on the subject of Batman, who here has seen the 60s Batman movie with Adam West? That movie is quite wonderful thanks to all the cheese. I love it.
I saw it years ago. Can't say I remember all that much about it.
I've learned to tolerate drama...except on the boat
I dunno, it just seems kind of insensitive...
I guess it didn't help that Mami finally felt loved...then she died. And then Homura just matter-of-factly speaks about the fact that she flat-out ceased to exist and nobody will notice...
You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
I watched the first few e.pisodes and then my attention span gave out
i confess that jokes about things like Batman's parents are kind of funny to me, in part because it's so blatantly insensitive. It's like 'oh no you didn't' you know? It's funny because you went there.
If they were real people i wouldn't be OK with that, but i guess i don't really think people's 'feeeeeeels' because of some comic book or whatever are so precious that they shouldn't be able to take the odd joke at their expense. If they can't, that's their problem.
i feel like i'm always at least one step behind everyone else here where original comedy is concerned, because i don't really read other websites with any regularity.
That applies to serious discussion too. Like discovering something people are tired of hearing about for the first time, that's an uncomfortable feeling.
I think that intentional offhandedness is part of why people think the series is impactful, but I haven't watched it myself so I can't say for sure.
You should, if only for the animation direction, which is breathtaking. (Incidentally, said director was also behind Pani Poni Dash, which you have expressed a fondness for, although here he is less frenetic and more atmospheric.)
>“They would be delighted to see fewer television commercials touting a candidate’s accomplishments or disparaging an opponent’s character,” the chief justice wrote. “Money in politics may at times seem repugnant to some, but so, too, does much of what the First Amendment vigorously protects. If the First Amendment protects flag burning, funeral protests and Nazi parades — despite the profound offense such spectacles cause — it surely protects political campaign speech despite popular opposition.”
ughhh
the thing is that "money = speech" is a perversion of democracy
It really, really is, especially because of how it prioritises the speech of the wealthy so greatly over what the public at large has to say, particularly its poorest members.
I've learned to tolerate drama...except on the boat
It's kind of frustrating that furries have long gotten short shrift from nerd culture and the mainstream at large.
Not talking about the sexual aspect - it's just a bit weird to me that nerds have never shied away from things that are usually considered to be for children, but somehow humanoid animals are just a bit TOO juvenile for regular nerds.
It's the sexual aspect and the nature of the subculture, I think, more than the anthropomorphism. No-one has any complaints about Maus, or stuff like Rice Boy. But this colours far more innocent things, or things that simply have a lot of independent merit, in a rather unfortunate way.
But furries aren't that much of a target any more.
watching stuff with anthropomorphic animals just makes me feel uncomfortable, with the only real exceptions being Looney Tunes and Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
and that was true even long before I knew anything about furries, so I can't blame it on mental association.
I've learned to tolerate drama...except on the boat
The sexual aspect seems to be what defines it for many - makes people think of a social taboo, seems to intrude on people's idea of childhood innocence...
I do kind of wonder if the MLP fandom has taken the furry fandom's place as the big punching bag - the perception that people are bringing juvenilia into a place where it doesn't belong, juvenilia for GIRLS no less...
watching stuff with anthropomorphic animals just makes me feel uncomfortable, with the only real exceptions being Looney Tunes and Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
and that was true even long before I knew anything about furries, so I can't blame it on mental association.
the problem with bronies (at least the stereotypical ones) is that they take something that is very much for young girls and proceed to step all over it and make it for adult men.
there is a lot wrong with that, especially when it's done deliberately--as it often is in the case of Bronies--and especially especially when it's done maliciously, as it sometimes is in the case of bronies.
watching stuff with anthropomorphic animals just makes me feel uncomfortable, with the only real exceptions being Looney Tunes and Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
and that was true even long before I knew anything about furries, so I can't blame it on mental association.
why does it make you feel uncomfortable?
it just does, man.
it's like eating ice cream with ketchup on it. It's not like, morally wrong, but most people would agree it's weird.
Yeah, I don't have a problem with more adult fan works and whatnot, so long as there is an understanding that the show is for young girls and those children should not be exposed to that stuff. But the entitlement that some of these fans show is just astounding.
As for things with anthropomorphic animals... I always kind of wanted to be an animal, so it was a draw, but a lot of shows in that vein are really not my bag, at least as an adult. Now, comics, on the other hand, are a different matter.
I also find it interesting how the French/Benelux and Japanese/Korean equivalents to the English-speaking furry fandom are significantly less marginalised, if not necessarily as distinct from the greater comics and animation fandom.
the problem with bronies (at least the stereotypical ones) is that they take something that is very much for young girls and proceed to step all over it and make it for adult men.
there is a lot wrong with that, especially when it's done deliberately--as it often is in the case of Bronies--and especially especially when it's done maliciously, as it sometimes is in the case of bronies.
that too
Furries seem to like dark-toned action shows like SWAT Kats and Sonic SatAM a lot...
It really depends on the group you're talking to? I guess I run in weird circles, but there's at least one dude I know who's into bara and old magical girl shows.
Some people have asked what wonderposting (a.k.a. shitposting) means to me.
In part, I think it carries a sort of air of nonseriousness and silliness.
Like, if I say something that inadvertently references a meme, I full well expect that reference to be exploited by a subsequent post -- and solely because it would be amusing to do so.
Comments
i remember you weren't happy about Mami jokes, either.
I think fourteenwings at IJBM finally convinced me to acquire it. So I have it now. Still haven't started it. Other than like 5 minutes lol.
Admittedly that's at least in part because i was at a very low point when i watched it and i found it therapeutic.
If they were real people i wouldn't be OK with that, but i guess i don't really think people's 'feeeeeeels' because of some comic book or whatever are so precious that they shouldn't be able to take the odd joke at their expense. If they can't, that's their problem.
i feel like i'm always at least one step behind everyone else here where original comedy is concerned, because i don't really read other websites with any regularity.
That applies to serious discussion too. Like discovering something people are tired of hearing about for the first time, that's an uncomfortable feeling.
but yeah, the wealthy folk in that get to live in Space Paradise while everyone else is stuck on overpopulated Earth
In part, I think it carries a sort of air of nonseriousness and silliness.
Like, if I say something that inadvertently references a meme, I full well expect that reference to be exploited by a subsequent post -- and solely because it would be amusing to do so.
quoting Centie's post here just to flag her since I don't know how to flag spaced usernames