If you go on YouTube and go back to the official trailer drops for Star Wars: Rogue One, you'll see a bunch of comments from people confused about where it fits into the timeline and where Rey and Finn and Poe are.
Included in these comment threads are speculation that Disney hadn't liked the response to The Force Awakens and had scrapped the sequel trilogy, etc.
I saw some similar user reviews from people who went into the movie thinking they were seeing a sequel to Episode 7 and were surprised/disappointed/confused that it wasn't.
To a lot of people reading these tweets, this must seem amazing. How could somebody be so into Star Wars and yet have missed all the publicity and articles about the plans for the "Star Wars Story" side movies, etc?
But to me, the more amazing thing here is: not even Disney has figured out a way to reach "the public". Not even Disney has cracked the code on reaching 100% messaging saturation and letting everyone in on their plans.
I'm bringing this up today because I'm seeing person after person talking about Twitter having changed the QT/RT system "without warning or explanation"...
And Twitter has been talking about this for weeks. I've seen so many articles and tweets.
It's true they didn't do one of their animated splash page introduction things to walk us all through it, but I suspect they have found those things cause more aggravation than illumination.
My point in pointing out that Twitter did tell us what they were doing isn't to go, "What, were you living under a rock?"
I'm just pointing out an important quirk of 21st century communication.
This is something that is important for creatives on social media to know about.
"How much can I promote my own stuff before it becomes annoying to my followers?" is the wrong question.
"...before my followers notice?" is a better question.
I have a bot on my Twitter account that a couple times a day tweets out a link to my Patreon or a tip jar or a book. It has some random variation but not a bunch. I really recommend something similar to anyone else selling their work on Twitter.
Listening to this 60 Minutes footage, and one of Trump's lines just jumped out at me.
"I say all the things."
(He's referencing social distancing, masking, etc.)
To him, it's just checking boxes. Magic word logic. He said the things, what more do we want?
90% of this "interview" is just him repeating his favorite talking points over and over again, which is the point for him. Saying the right things. It's how he operates. It's how Fox News and the right-wing media machine operates.
...wow, I listened to the whole thing, and Trump's much-touted cutting it short is just him deciding the interview is done when they get the 5 minute warning. It's somehow even more petulant than I imagined.
My child set out the other day,
departed the underworld the usual way.
But there were shades to sort, titans to slay
and he learned how to walk just to get away.
He was talking to Nyx, and as he left,
he said, "You know I'm gonna find my mom, Dad.
Gonna find out why she left."
And the louts of Tartarus and the Asphodel, the rivers of flame and the hounds of hell.
"When you giving up, son?"
"I never will."
"You're stuck here forever still. You know you're gonna be here still."
My son reached Greece the other day,
he said, "Put down your spear, dad, and walk away. Can't we just talk for once?"
I said, "Not today. I got a cape to burn..." and he said, "C'mon, let's play."
But his feet never dimmed as he Divine Dashed. They said I'm coming after you...
🎵🎶AND THE CAT'S IN THE CRADLE AND THE SILVER SPOON, LITTLE BOY BLUE AND THE MAN IN THE MOON🎶🎵
I went to look up background on the song "Cat's in the Cradle" on Wikipedia and I learned that Harry Chapin said the song "scared the hell out of" him, and
Honestly, the idea that I don't make enough time for people is one of the things that haunts me. I never feel like I have enough time for the things I want, much less the things I need to do, and people...
I'm generally bad at Background Activities. Like I'm not the person who turns the TV on to have something on the TV while I'm doing stuff. I mostly wind up watching it, or not. But I'm trying it with documentary serieses on things I'm not super invested in.
Because there are a lot of podcasts and Actual Play things I'd like to listen to, if I can cultivate the skill.
Today I watched a couple episodes of this Myths & Monsters thing on Netflix because it's a topic I'm interested in but if there's anything I can tune out it's a lot of effusiveness about Joseph Campbell.
Back when it still seemed like he might have to court evangelicals, he said multiple times he hadn't sought forgiveness for sins because he's never done anything wrong. That's like the most blasphemous thing imaginable, in Christian thought.
Back when Sessions was still in the DOJ and they were feuding, when asked if he had any regrets he said he regretted "that Sessions recused himself", "that Sessions didn't tell me he wouldn't do the job", etc. Not that he regretted hiring him.
Asked point-blank if he regretted hiring Sessions, that was his answer: he regretted that Sessions wasn't doing the job he was hired for (i.e., protecting him) and he thought that it was dishonest of Sessions to take the job in the first place.
So everybody confused about why the Toobin thing is not just a "whoopsie" or "a thing that could happen to anybody" - look at CNN's response, which is "Well, he's too important to our company to fire or discipline, so whaddayagonado, y'know?"
This is why it can't be "innocent".
I've never had a job where I wouldn't have been fired for masturbating on the clock, much less in view of coworkers. I know it's hard to quantify things like cable news stardom but at the point a network won't fire you? You're a star.
You remember Donald Trump saying "When you're famous, they let you do it," right? We all understand he wasn't talking about consent there, right? He was saying: if you're powerful, you get away with it.