JJDrinkwater

35 Followers
138 Following
355 Posts
Born to speak all mirth and no matter. Except sometimes. The world is mad, I'm reasonably eclectic, I'm usually reading, and here we all are. 
PS I quote a lot, most often from the public domain, attribution on request.
#NoBridge
@snorerot13
Your photos take my back to the LA in which I grew up 👍

James Earl Jones had a great voice, but that's not why you remember him. A deep, powerful voice is fine, but James Earl Jones could do things with his voice because he was a great actor. He knew how to use the instrument he was given. He developed it with effort and practice. He brought his humanity to its use. That's why you remember him. His humanity and his craft.

All the times you pretended to be Darth Vader, you probably did what we all do when we're not James Earl Jones: you probably got as low as you could and did a kind of growly monotone. Maybe you put your hand over your mouth to really sell it. James Earl Jones didn't do that. Listen to his Vader sometime, with ears as fresh as you can. He's not a robot. He's not growling. There's power there, but there's emotion too.

And Vader is just one smidgen of his skill. It's a silly villain role in a silly kids movie about space wizards that, let's face it, no one thought would sell. He wasn't ashamed of Darth Vader, so you shouldn't be either. Without James Earl Jones, Darth Vader would have been less. But watch James Earl Jones act sometime. Even in a bad movie. The man brought it to every damn role he played. He was good at what he did, and he worked at it. Watch him be quiet. His whisper carries weight.

We have this idea that acting isn't really work, that being a movie star is just a matter of being famous. That's true of many movie stars, but probably fewer than you think. And James Earl Jones wasn't a movie star. He was an actor, of stage and screen and voice. I guarantee you, he worked at it.

We shall not see his like again.

Looking through my closet for something to wear to the EFF Awards this week, I ruled out my sequined jumpsuit because I've worn it to a work event before. Then I remembered that the work event in question was in December of 2017.
Fate smiles again. Now, the robots get married and eat cookies.
Why is #Trump so scared to debate #Harris? Can't he just fall asleep the way he does whenever a prosecutor is talking?

I've posted this before, but now it's on YouTube, and I wasn't happy with the vocals in the previous version so I fixed them up a little bit. This is my setting of a bitter, but witty, little poem about the Inclosure Acts in England, which converted common land that people who weren't landowners could use to graze livestock and such into private land only the owners could access. It's slightly topical, since it relates to the government taking away well-established rights. Governments have done that for a long time, it seems.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iqZR5VwyaFw

#folkmusic #englishfolk #diatonicmelodeon

Goose and Common

YouTube

@paige the whole world would do well to adopt the FTC's "it must be as easy to cancel a subscription as it is to sign up" proposal

https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2023/03/federal-trade-commission-proposes-rule-provision-making-it-easier-consumers-click-cancel-recurring

Federal Trade Commission Proposes Rule Provision Making it Easier for Consumers to “Click to Cancel” Recurring Subscriptions and Memberships

The Federal Trade Commission today proposed a “click to cancel” provision requiring sellers to make it as easy for consumers to cancel their enrollment as it was to sign up.

Federal Trade Commission
There’s going to be a ‘Moomin Pride’ event in the UK this year – and it already looks adorable

The first Moomin Pride event in the UK will be held at London’s The Common Press on 19 June, celebrating creator Tove Jansson.

PinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news

One way to write good sci-fi:

Take something from actual science and riff on it, draw it out to absurd conclusions and write a twist at the end that follows from the premise

Like "cute aggression"—you could do a whole-ass Doctor Who episode about how the aliens were ramping up our cute aggression and the Doctor defeats them with the power of otters

One way to write bad sci-fi:

Think about a political point you want to make

Now write up a contrived allegory for it