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Delightful Fibonacci sequence poem
Poet Brian Bilston wrote this delightful poem above describing, and embodying, the Fibonacci sequence in which each every number after the first two in a series is the sum of the preceding two numbers. (via @pickover)
https://boingboing.net/2017/07/24/delightful-fibonacci-sequence.html
“Transformers: Titans Return” will feature the voice talents of Peter Cullen as Optimus Prime — the role he originated for the original 1980s animated TV show – along with Wil Wheaton, Judd Nelson, Michael Dorn and Jason David Frank in the digital series from Warner Bros.’ Machinima and toy giant Hasbro.
The first chapter of the trilogy, “Transformers: Combiner Wars,” has generated more than 125 million views since debuting in August 2016, exclusively on Go90 in the U.S., according to Machinima.
‘Transformers: Titans Return’ Series Casts Peter Cullen, Judd Nelson, Wil Wheaton
I recorded this months ago, and it’s been KILLING ME to not talk about it. I’m so excited! I grew up with the original Transformers animated series, and played with the toys until their joints were so loose, I couldn’t stand them up.
Being part of the Transformers canon is a very big deal for me, a huge honor, and a dream come true.
And it’s probably silly to care about it, but it makes me feel like maybe I’m not a total failure when Daily Variety (the Industry newspaper) includes my name in their headline with Peter Freaking Cullen.
(via wilwheaton)
Job Interview question. by nimblemind https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammerHumor/comments/6nekri/job_interview_question/?utm_source=ifttt
Hi. I want to write an epic space opera, so I was wondering what are some classic points my stoey needs and what has been done to death? Also, fun fact, Charlton Heston’s character in Planet of the Apes is from my town. Unfortunately, his school was made up.
Rod Serling once gave the best advice to writing:
take however many books you’re reading right now, and double that.This is probably not the answer you want to hear, but it’s a
mistake to think in terms of tropes. A lot of people go into writing with their
heads: they want to subvert expectations in a clever way. They write because
they want to get a pat on the head for being smart (”in this novel, it
turns out the Love Interest is actually the Dragon with a hint of Lightning
Bruiser!”). Overused tropes and clichés aren’t the problem, though. When people say
they didn’t like a story because it was cliché or overdone, what they mean is,
they didn’t believe it.If you want to tell a military scifi story, do that. It’s
like a piece of advice an acting coach once gave me: no matter how many actors
there are, there’s always room for one more good one.If you want to tell a story about space pirates (to pick a
particularly common scifi theme), tell a story about space pirates, but “don’t
try to impress me, try to convince me.” This means identifying exactly what it
is you want to say and convincing me of it. A lot of people bristle at this
because for some strange reason, we have the first culture in human history
that is suspicious of clear communication, and for some reason, loves
ambiguity.So, if you want to tell a story about space pirates, you
have to identify what it is you want to say. Suppose you have the idea that all
criminal organizations are is just “outsider capitalism.” It’s family and
protection for people who have none of the above, and that the difference
between pirates and a big business is simply that one is run by people on the
outside who “weren’t invited to the party.”So, if that’s what you want to say, a story about space
pirates starts to take shape. Your main character comes to life, as he is the
person the audience sees the story through and we like who he likes, trusts who
he trusts. You start the story inside a big interstellar corporation, but our
hero sees they practice all kinds of underhanded traits he later sees in the
pirates, except the “big guys” get away with it. Since a good rule is that the
main character is the person in the story who gets into the most trouble, you
have him as a stiff executive who gets kicked out of a corporation, who then is
forced to join the pirates because like everyone else there, he has nowhere
else to go. Your main character is in some way an unfinished, imperfect person; the point of the story is to have him improve or learn something.At first, because he has the expectations the audience does,
our hero believes they’re all cut-throats, but we see a different side to them:
we see them not as evil, but people who are somehow unacceptable to society in
some way. All the pirate characters are created to drive that idea home. One
was pushed off his home by a corporation; one is a member of a religious group
that isn’t liked; one is a cyborg, which are discriminated against; one is a
runaway clone of an executive about to be chopped up for parts. None of them
have families, since the point of the story is to show how organizations like
this can be surrogate families. The story starts to write itself: our hero tries to protect his surrogate family (as our hero cares, we care, too), and we see the pirates get punished for things the “big guys” get away with.The finale writes itself: the pirates fight the big corporation and our hero chooses to side with the pirates even after a final temptation. Endings should feel easier to write than beginnings; a story is like a funnel, at the beginning, anything can happen, but as it goes on, the range of possibilities narrow until one final outcome is possible.
See? Right there, we have a story that subverts
expectations and does something interesting with an overused trope (space pirates), but subverting expectations is a means, not an end in and of itself. It’s all about expressing clearly what you have to say.
Thanks.
Now I want to read this space pirate story.
Not all heros wear capes.
I want to buy this woman a beer.
This woman is named June Ayres and she has owned and operated Reproductive Health Services, which is currently the only clinic in Montgomery, Alabama, for about 30 years. May I suggest that you donate the price of that beer to The Linda D Foundation, which helps Alabama women afford reproductive services including birth control, emergency contraception, and abortion services? http://alabamareproductiverightsadvocates.com/thelindadfoundation/
You could also donate to the National Abortion Federation here: http://prochoice.org/about-naf/support-naf/
This gifset is from an incredible documentary called Trapped. You can find or organize a screening or stream it for free here: http://www.trappeddocumentary.com/
It’s seriously an amazing movie about some amazing people.
This woman’s casual level of “Fuck You” herosim is exactly what I aspire to be in life.
Star trek au where everything is the same except that everyone wears Wesley’s lumpy grey sweater.
This made me laugh harder than it should have, and now I need someone to make this image.
Marc Kasowitz, President Trump’s personal attorney on the Russia case, threatened a stranger in a string of profanity-laden emails Wednesday night.
The man, a retired public relations professional in the western United States who asked not to be identified, read ProPublica’s story this week on Kasowitz and sent the lawyer an email with the subject line: “Resign Now.’’
Kasowitz replied with series of angry messages sent between 9:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. Eastern time. One read: “I’m on you now. You are fucking with me now Let’s see who you are Watch your back , bitch.”
In another email, Kasowitz wrote: “Call me. Don’t be afraid, you piece of shit. Stand up. If you don’t call, you’re just afraid.” And later: “I already know where you live, I’m on you. You might as well call me. You will see me. I promise. Bro.”
Kasowitz’s spokesman, Michael Sitrick, said Thursday he couldn’t immediately reach Kasowitz for comment.
ProPublica confirmed the man’s phone number matched his stated identity. Technical details in the emails, such as IP addresses and names of intermediate mail servers, also show the emails came from Kasowitz’s firm. In one email, Kasowitz gave the man a cell phone number that is not widely available. We confirmed Kasowitz uses that number.