exasperation

joined 11 months ago
[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 15 points 3 months ago (2 children)

It's Pat, the movie, was a notorious commercial bomb, and sold basically no tickets.

It was made, though, because the recurring SNL sketch was popular enough to attract the investment.

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 1 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Maybe it's a confidence thing, but I think of myself in the green. Am I at the very top of the intelligence spectrum? No, but I don't need to be. The higher you go, the more there's diminishing returns to additional intelligence, and the more likely that it's something else other than intelligence holding you back. So it's worth working on those things instead of believing that being 99.9th percentile in intelligence makes a meaningful difference in one's life, compared to merely being 98th percentile. Which barely makes a difference in most situations compared to being 90th percentile.

In other words, being any smarter wouldn't unlock anything that I can't already do. The stuff I'm not capable of doing, it's not intelligence holding me back. And the stuff I'm capable of doing, well, I'm already there.

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 2 points 3 months ago

There's never gonna be a universally good unit for energy. Calories work well for heat, watt hours for stored or metered electrical energy, even electron volts for certain quantum physics. Plus the actual SI standard of joules.

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 9 points 3 months ago

I'm a subscriber to their monthly print copy, and a lot of the stories in the print version don't make it to the website as quickly. I've got the February copy on my desk with the following headlines:

  • Trump Administration Offers Free At-Home Loyalty Tests: Tool That Diagnoses Disobedience to be Mailed to U.S. Households
  • U.S. Military Bans Men With Girl Names From Combat - Wars Will No Longer Be Fought By Male Shannons, Terrys, or Carmens
  • Baby Saves Affair: Illicit Relationship Rekindled by Out-of-Wedlock Birth

As far as I can tell, these articles never made it online. And they are funny. Good coffee table material.

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 2 points 3 months ago

I'm basically saying two things.

  1. Permanence isn't required or expected, although in some instances permanence is valued, in defining success.
  2. Permanence itself does not require continuing effort. One can leave a permanent mark on something without active maintenance.

Taken together, success doesn't require permanence, and permanence doesn't require continued effort. The screenshot text is wrong to presume that our culture only values permanence, and is wrong in its implicit argument that permanence requires continued effort.

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 27 points 3 months ago (2 children)

we as a culture have turned “forever” into the only acceptable definition of success.

I really don't agree with the premise, and would encourage others to reject that worldview if it starts creeping into how they think about things.

In the sports world, everything is always changing, and careers are very short. But what people do will be recorded forever, so those snapshots in time are part of one's legacy after they're done with their careers. We can look back fondly at certain athletes or coaches or specific games or plays, even if (or especially if) that was just a particular moment in time that the sport has since moved on from. Longevity is regarded as valuable, and maybe relevant to greatness in the sport, but it is by no means necessary or even expected. Michael Jordan isn't a failed basketball player just because he wasn't able to stay in the league, or even that his last few years in the league weren't as legendary as his prime years. Barry Sanders isn't a failed American football player just because he retired young, either.

Same with entertainment. Nobody really treats past stars as "failed" artists.

If you write a book or two, then decide that you don’t actually want to keep doing that, you're a “failed” writer.

That is a foreign concept to me, and I question the extent to which this happens. I don't know anyone who treats these authors (or actors or directors or musicians) as failures, just because they've moved onto something else. Take, for example, young actors who just don't continue in the career. Jack Gleeson, famous for playing Joffrey in the Game of Thrones series, is an actor who took a hiatus, might not come back to full time acting. And that's fine, and it doesn't take away from his amazing performance in that role.

The circumstances of how things end matter. Sometimes the ending actually does indicate failure. But ending, in itself, doesn't change the value of that thing's run when it was going on.

| just think that something can be good, and also end, and that thing was still good.

Exactly. I would think that most people agree, and question the extent to which people feel that the culture values permanence. If anything, I'd argue that modern culture values the opposite, that we tend to want new things always changing, with new fresh faces and trends taking over for the old guard.

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 3 points 3 months ago

You guys are getting diagnosed?!?

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 6 points 3 months ago

Maybe I'm not up to date on my porn slang but "BBC micro" sounds like an inherent contradiction.

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 7 points 3 months ago (2 children)

It's immunotherapy that prevents the cancers from deactivating the immune cells that would ordinarily kill the cancer cells. So it's like a traditional vaccine in that it causes changes to the immune system to better equip it to fight disease, but it's a pretty new methodology of accomplishing that.

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 5 points 3 months ago

I'm a human! I'm a human male!

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 5 points 3 months ago

I feel the same way about the first and second Terminators, and the first Rambo and its sequels.

[–] exasperation@lemm.ee 6 points 3 months ago (1 children)

That paper reads like it was written by an undergrad going through cargo cult motions of sounding like a scientist. And the evidence is still weak: many of those studies being summarized are studies where they poisoned rats and investigated whether onion juice has some kind of protection against the poison, as measured by testosterone levels.

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