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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: December 8th, 2023

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  • The production team is basically showing their hand and saying “yeah, our goal is to make you cry every episode for the entire season”. That’s ambitious and I like it.


    Maybe I’m just easily manipulated, but this first story got me (even with them having to take the time to establish the premise first). It could’ve hit harder, sure, but it (subjectively ofc) felt like a pretty promising start to me. If I have one thing to nitpick it’s actually the soundtrack when she goes into town–it feels out of place? it doesn’t mesh and feels frantic. It’s entirely possible that it was intentional–I’m willing to trust the story for now.

    I loved the cold open! It really efficiently establishes the mood, sets up the magical aspect with the single “tea brewing” shot, and shows us Meg’s personality through how others (Ms. Faust and all the animals) interact with her. When people say “show, don’t tell”, this is what they mean.


  • didn’t feel slow at all.

    there were actually a couple spots I wished lingered a little longer (to sink in), but they were also trying to fit quite a lot into this first episode.

    competently directed

    There were lots of little touches I really enjoyed! e.g. Ms. Faust being framed in the bottle, the cloud (literally) coming over her face, Anna dissolving into younger Meg. One (subtler) parallel between Anna and Meg I noticed was: Meg is supposedly going to die from a curse, and her teacher (“the greatest witch”) cannot save her; while Anna’s mom died from an illness, and her dad is apparently a doctor/pharmacist.

    It wouldn’t surprise me if it was revealed as all being a trick by the old witch as a character building exercise.

    Even if we play along with Ms. Faust here, I feel like there’s two layers (kinda) to the whole ordeal—one is she needs to literally collect tears (joy) in order to live the rest of her life, and the other is that she needs that joy to really live, in the carpe diem sense. … I hope that made sense…





  • Ernest@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.worldServo vs Ladybird.
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    11 days ago

    nah. it may not be a huge deal (esp. if you’re male) and “screaming” might be exaggerating it, but “keep personal politics out of code” is classic “I consider your existence political”.

    I’m happy to see if the guy’s politics has changed in the years since this happened, and I don’t know if their involvement in the project is worthy of a boycott, but those are personal choices (and the relevant comment was even helpfully linked).






  • because in the long medium term sooner than I imagine, those things are going to happen anyway. Presenting it as a choice between “saving (some) fed employees” vs “fucking them over” is disingenuous. The actual choice is between “ceding power and the news narrative” vs not. People are upset that the Dems keep doing this, despite the long history of “working across the aisle” not working.

    To address your specific points: just because there are things the Republicans want, doesn’t mean they’re “good” for them (see: all? of their policies). In the case of federal employees, passing the “CR”* isn’t going to get them paid–the GOP doesn’t care what the laws say (obviously). The Dems should be obstructing other ridiculous funding bills as well, because the only thing they can do is be in the news cycle for obstruction (and then using that time to sell progressive policies that most people agree with). That’s the only leverage they have. This appeasement threw that away. The hive of scum and villainy is only going to continue their illegal cuts, and the correct response is to fight back, not to lend them more legitimacy. Dems have tried that for decades and this is what it’s gotten us.

    *: it’s not really a “continuing” resolution, as it has a bunch of Trumpian garbage in it that wasn’t in the previous appropriations bill. They’re just… calling it that, and Senate Dems have tacitly endorsed it as such.






  • Ernest@lemm.eetoInternet is Beautiful@lemm.eeEmoji Kitchen
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    25 days ago

    yeah, but it’s really easy to justify anything being AI, since there’s always something slightly off or some mistake somewhere even with human art

    For emoji kitchen specifically, I know Jennifer Daniel (formerly Google’s blobmoji, now more famous as Unicode’s emoji subcommittee chair) does a lot of them (if not all?), since she tweets about it a lot. (For what it’s worth, she also seems kinda anti-AI.)

    Having gone in to modify some of the emoji kitchen combinations myself, you can tell that someone was editing the original files (SVGs/Illustrator/whatever vector graphics were originally used to make them), either with a template or just some kind of copy/paste job, and there are parts that were obviously just mirrored (something genAI is usually pretty bad at). I’m specifically thinking of all the little facets on the diamond + heart combos.

    I’m like 95% sure you’ll be able to find tweets where she talks about actually drawing the emojis if you scroll back far enough, but Twitter is so completely unusable now I’m not going to be the one to look for them