LGOrcStreetSamurai [he/him]

  • 9 Posts
  • 62 Comments
Joined 3 年前
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Cake day: 2021年6月23日

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  • The thing I always get mad at it is people never examine the fact he’s a part of the defense industry. Yes he’s a hardworking Joe who wants to just be with his family but the dudes job is literally building the infrastructure to make other hardworking Joes in some far away land unable to do the same. I agree with/empathize/understand a few parts of the movie but I have never liked the fact the dude doesn’t seem to understand his job is apart of the system he loathes. The movies does a good job of making a CHUD a somewhat reasonable man with somewhat reasonable frustrations with the world. Even his portrayal of directing his rage and ire at the wrong targets makes sense (sadly a rather real thing), I yearn for a movie that has a the courage to go beyond that.

    Movies like this are always SOOOOO close to understanding and portraying real power structures but always flake in the narrative and the seeds of liberalism brake the underlying soil of the film and bloom with the bitter fruit of individualism. He’s a bad guy, the system is fine. I hate that shit






  • I’m always curious if we will see a return to actors having a real working class background who really did dream of having gigs that gave them insurance. Before the rise of modern understanding celebrity lots of actors were just regular actors not connected to of the Hollywood Matrix. I would imagine a lot of talent have connections and born into it, but I would also imagine there are tons of people in front and behind the camera who just working katz who love movie-magic.











  • Yeah, The Virtuous Mission and Operation Snake Eater both occur in 1964. 📦🐍

    (For the record the only reason I have that knowledge off the top of my dome is because I have a print out of the MGS timeline on my nerd bookshelf. I used that print out for TTRPG writing sessions as well. Also I find the 60’s cold war era to be a uniquely fascinating time as it’s a confluence of so many interesting social and political movements. Most importantly of course, The Civil Rights era specifically due its influence on my life)




  • “On the job” training these days is like a fuckin’ poorly designed game. It’s mostly fail at something they don’t explain to you properly and assuming you don’t die you kind of extrapolate from there. Yes, trial and error is a way to learn, but with any sort of technical skill or task (or even social behavior), it’s a lot easier and better when you are instructed or better yet paired with a teacher of some kind.

    In my experience, having an experienced colleague is often the fast way a new hire can get up to speed, but that requires a job to prioritize workers in some meaningful way.

    They are treat us all as individual node utterly unconnected to other nodes. they want you to learn on your time not theirs. Also I hate “upskill-ing” being totally outsourced but also is kinda mandatory these days. They all wonder why we all hate work, and never take a second to look at how work is done and more importantly HOW THEY made it worse