erin

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I missed the original comment and this discussion now makes no sense. Why would you edit the content of your comment when you don't care about the points or the outrage?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

On the contrary, since growing my nails out my nails have been way more clean. There is an awkward period between no nails and long nails where stuff gets caught underneath, but once you grow them out (only two weeks or so), they're perfectly clean because there's just more space underneath and nowhere for gunk to get caught as the angle is wider.

my nails, for reference (sorry my power is out

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago

(Classic guitar players have long nails)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I feel no need to be protected in my day to day life. My partner provides love, companionship, empathy, and a listening ear. Sure, some women might care about protection and toughness or whatever you're on about, but attraction varies from person to person. Most other women I know want to be heard and loved. People are allowed to want to fuck "fragile" men. They can be hot without needing to be "manly." You're putting so much stock in traditional gender norms, not realizing that it's not women that actually care about those. It's the men that are trying to be that. Some women will, of course, but women aren't a monolith. Want an example? Timothy Chalamet is very commonly considered to be an extremely attractive actor, and he's far more androgynous and "fragile," as you put it, than your traditional masculine ideal. Just as many women might be attracted to any number of different appearances, because people are different! The days of needing a strong man to support us frail women are over. Your insecurities and ideas of masculinity are clouding your judgment.

To answer your question succinctly: No, they aren't fragile looking, they're just slim. No, they don't look "dehumanized," they look like people. The dehumanization happens in industry, not with their faces. I know people that look similar. Some women find them hot, and want to fuck them, and idolize them, because they are hot! They're very attractive people, if that aesthetic is what you're into! If your only metric is how likely they are to win a fight, sure, they probably aren't at the top of the scale, but the vast majority of people DON'T CARE.

They told you to look into therapy because you have an unhealthy idea of what women are attracted to and what masculinity should be. They called you insecure because you sound insecure (why do women like the weak little boys and not big manly men :(( they look so frail and weak, don't women know they can't protect them??). Whether or not that's how you're actually thinking, it's how it comes across. Instead of realizing that some people do like strong men, you took it to a place of jealousy and defensiveness.

TLDR: Different strokes for different folks. Don't obsess over people you don't find attractive still being attractive to others, as it isn't good for your mental health and isn't a good look.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

If you think that this:

Replace "machine" with "film crew", "rerun" with "do another take", and "tweak the prompt" with "provide notes". If they're giving notes to a computer or a person doesn't really change the nature of their work, only the language they use to provide those notes.

is what a director does? You have no clue what you're talking about. They're far more involved in the creative process on every level than you understand.

Your question about who AI helps is a valid one. I agree that that's what's important about AI use. I use AI in my work, but not to replace human beings, but as a tool to make easy mock ups or test ideas. I find trying to replace human creativity in a way that replaces jobs or the human spark that makes art, art, abhorrent. AI art cannot exist without humans to train on, so humans cannot be fully replaced, but I hope to never see a day where AI takes the positions of well compensated artists leeching off the work of unpaid or underpaid humans.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 months ago (3 children)

I'm not suggesting that the director has full responsibility for the art. They are part of a team, and the creative style of a director heavily influences the finished product. You can tell who directed a movie just by watching it. There are very important creative decisions and directions that point the team of more specialized artists in the right direction.

This is not analogous to AI art. That would be like the director of a movie telling a team of interns to cut together clips of other movies as best they see fit, within a general outline of the script. A person using AI to generate art isn't part of the creative process in the same way; they tell a machine what to do, and decide whether to rerun or tweak the prompt after seeing the result. This takes some small modicum of creativity, but it isn't creating art. It's fine for fun, or to use as a stand in tool, or to mock-up designs, but it will never have the creative direction of a human being, or stand on the same level with true masters, regardless of how well it can copy their style. It can't understand the art.

Directing is an art form of its own. The cinematography, the pacing, the set design, acting, and so much more is all influenced by the director's decisions. It would be like saying a conductor or a music producer isn't an artist. Easy to say if you don't have an understanding of the art form, but dead wrong. There are a ton of creative choices at all levels made by directors, and there's a reason we've been using them in one way or another since we first started performance art. I've worked under and beside directors in the past, and I have only the utmost respect for what a good director can do for the art.

A bad director however... I might agree with you.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 3 months ago (5 children)

That certainly is an opinion

[–] [email protected] 18 points 3 months ago

Yes. "Cis" is just a description, like "straight" or "white." Calling someone "cis" is not an insult, but some conservatives take it as such. The common phrase they echo is "I'm not cis, I'm normal." They're trying to denormalize trans people by making an inoffensive and common descriptor an insult. The same people sometimes have a problem with being called straight by queer people because they see themselves not as straight, but normal, and anything different is abnormal. In reality, "gay," "straight," "trans," and "cis" are no more abnormal descriptors than calling someone "black," "white," "American," or "tall." It's all just "othering" those they perceive as political opponents.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

They're seismically isolated

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Or much much longer. It's not going anywhere. It can't escape its cask, and outside human intervention the casks won't be breached. It's just locked-up metal that gives off some radiation, fully contained within the cask. It isn't oozing green goo.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago (1 children)

The casks waste is stored in would take bunker buster yields to breach.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago (8 children)

All the waste a plant ever produces in its lifetime can be contained with ease on site. Waste certainly isn't the main issue, though it's portrayed to be. Cost of deployment and staffing are more prohibitive issues, and both are surmountable. I don't think it's a bandaid for all power issues, but it's a powerful tool that should be used more often, not phased out.

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