I was/am a compositor/vfx artist for film and tv, but the industry has imploded over the last year so it’s been a few months.
I was/am a compositor/vfx artist for film and tv, but the industry has imploded over the last year so it’s been a few months.
Yeah I dunno man. Ever since I made my account, half the posts I’ve seen have been complaining about whatever the hell tankies are, and almost all the rest are jokes about arch linux. The politics stuff seems more niche than just “left”, but I haven’t dug too deeply into it. There are other active communities if you dig around. Mostly I dig on star trek memes and programmer humor and it’s a good time.
Coxming txo Stexam Junex 1x3
I put ketchup on fish n chips because malt vinegar is disgusting foot water and my mind can not be changed.
tbf the maple syrup IS watered down, but it’s super weird because it’s literally the Mafia doing it.
I mean unless you have a million dollars or something.
Also most of Quebec doesn’t give a shit about drinking in public places, as long as you don’t do it on the train or the bus.
But… R.O.B. wasn’t an add-on. It was a way to market the NES as a toy rather than a console, in the wake of the video games crash of 1983-85. Was just a way to sideload NES systems into the houses of wary consumers.
I mean yeah it’s mostly used by meatheads who get excited that somebody got punched, regardless of context…but I’m not exactly clutching my pearls at the use of a gasp bad word.
Thanks for this rational breakdown of what’s actually happening. Pretty misleading headline tbh.
My wife pours the milk into an empty bowl then brings the cereal box to her seat and pours it in one spoonful at a time. She insists this makes sense to do, and it’s the only way she’ll eat cereal.
Hotdog. Not hotdog.
I think The Final Sacrifice might take it for me. Rowsdower ftw.
So not to nitpick here, but Juneteenth isn’t intended to remember the destruction of any neighborhood. Black Wall Steet, Central Park, etc. were all significant things that happened, but not related to Juneteenth. It’s the day that the last slaves in Texas were actually declared free by the Union army on June 19th in Galveston.