JohnnyEnzyme

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 month ago

And... what symmetry would THAT be, dude?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

It's been a long, loooong time since I've uttered these words, but: THAT ABSOLUTELY KICKS ASS. (or Romulan pastrami, whatever)

Now, there's always going to be a quibble, so here's mine: Leonard Nimoy was about 6' in actual height, and I believe Jon Frakes is about 6'3" - 6'4," right around Michael Dorn's height, for example.

Still-- I get it. If the artist is trying to suggest the outsized influence of Spock, I understand. I mean, Shatner was utterly magnificent in his role, but Nimoy was also right there with him, a brilliant, iconic presence that helped turn TOS in to what might have otherwise been "Lost in Space."

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

I love this comic, because "never quit / never surrender" is one of the godamn stoopidest phrases in our culture.

How about: "Take a break, re-tool, gather yourself, ask yourself if this is what you really want, and if so, can our methodology and stress-relief be improved? Well then, well then!"

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

Oops, pardon my rambunctiousness, there!

So, over here I try to casually aim for one-post-per-day on my little startup anti-Reddit community (EGN+), which... oh, bother, it's still too much work for me, daggit! (I have CFS/ME)

In addition, I feel like I need to explain every little thing. Which is probably a sensationally idiotic goal, right? *gulp*

I think your method is more practical, frankly.

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

Omigosh, you just made my day, crafty. !

We've talked about art before, meh, eh!

(fellow artists talking about art, lol)

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 months ago (4 children)

Wow, I've made some decent paper pixelations before, but they took forever, and are simply not as good as this.

Formidable!

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

Thanks, Ella!

Yes I agree, some privacy payment info would probably help folks like me in future. I don't have much experience (nor confidence) in this area and could frankly use a slight bit of hand-holding, haha.

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

I'll try again tomorrow. I'm having some trouble here today.

I also missed the part about using Github, and of course I don't know what my options are for that either.

So for virtual CC, I'll try setting that up with my bank, altho it might be a little bit of a long-shot. As an alternative, would you recommend something like... "Privacy.com" I seem to recall?

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

Nice! And:

Shiny things are pretty simple if you think of them as different gray shapes making a whole.

That's great, haha.

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

Thank you.
I'm indeed living in the USA at this time.

In which case, do you have any thoughts about how I might make a donation to this instance? TBH I'm a bit scared about giving out my credit / debit card info, so I tend to err on the side of extreme caution.

Just set up an acct with one of those four agencies, I imagine?

 

After being helped several times with my various community issues by our kind site-runner, I would like to make a useful donation at this time. Oy, but there seems to be a problem:

Now, I use an add-on in Chrome called "uMatrix," which is a script-blocker. This add-on forces me to hand-enable whatever necessary java-scripts there might be on sites, but it's not perfect. Okay, fine, so in Ko-fi's case, I wound up having to turn the tool completely OFF in order to get to the final payment-step, for anyone reading who had issues with such.

Now, to the final step:
My donation / pay options are evidently these: iDEAL, Bancontact, Przelewy24 and EPS.

New problem: I have utterly no idea what those are.
Is there a way then to donate via PayPal, perhaps?

EDIT: Sorry, I guess this should have gone in "Support." Please do move as necessary.

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

Kinda why we have gouache and 'watercolor pencils,' I suppose.

Could I see some of your stuff, perhaps?
https://lemm.ee/post/34206488

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago (4 children)

Well, you're not redolent of linseed, so what the hell do I know. :P

 

First of all, major thanks to @[email protected] for this brilliant community and their tireless efforts to share beautiful art. <3

Me, I happened to spot this piece at the evil empire the other day, did some searching, and found that it hadn't been shared here, before. Well then, well then..!

It was during his time in the western Pacific in 1944 as a combat correspondent with the United States 1st Marine Division during the invasion of the tiny island of Peleliu that Lea would really make a name for himself among the readers of LIFE. "My work there consisted of trying to keep from getting killed and trying to memorize what I saw and felt," he says.

Lea's vivid, realistic images of the beach landing, and Battle of Peleliu, would impact both readers and himself. The Price and That 2,000 Yard Stare would become among his most famous works. (1,794 Americans died in a two-month period in what many call the war's most controversial battle, due to its questionable strategic value and high death toll). --WP (click there for hi-res version)

As an alt, here's a more florid version of the color scheme that I chanced upon:

 

My community is:
https://lemm.ee/c/eurographicnovels

The post I was working on was:
https://lemm.ee/post/2890991

To be clear-- I, in no, way, shape or form intend to delete my community. I wish the community to remain undeleted, thanks.

In case it matters:

57 users / day
150 users / week
444 users / month
1.53K users / 6 months
635 subscribers
317 Posts
902 Comments

EDIT: Google retains the specific URL's of a bunch of our posts, such as the "Moebius" ones.

 

At one point Dunn was considered by Gene Roddenberry for the part of Spock in The Cage. He was also originally considered for the role of Balok in The Corbomite Maneuver, but that part eventually went to Clint Howard. (source: These Are the Voyages)

Me, I really enjoyed Michael's work on this ep, as well as on Wild, Wild West, in which he evidently appeared ten times across four seasons!

In his lone appearance on Star Trek, he played Alexander to perfection, a chronically-abused 'runt-of-the-litter' who famously turns the tables on his abusers.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Dunn_(actor)

Sadly, he seems to have lived in constant pain across his life due to physical problems, ones which ultimately killed him at 38yo. This dude was an absolute boss as I reckon it.

 

I'm going with William Windom:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lS7cK-mQ0fQ&t=134s

Staving off reality:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qmnpz6TheSs

Doing a villain turn by seizing control:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83tW0jhEvZE

Matt's heroic sacrifice:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U_mwtoeqneM

Finally, one of the most nail-biting scenes ever:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHmsnQ8WVpw

Personal notes: across all TV and media, I've rarely seen a character go from totally sympathetic, to total heel-turn villain, to total martyr like that.

In terms of ST series, maybe Dukat from DS..?

Runner-ups?

  • Mark Lenard as the Romulan commander

  • Robert Walker as "Charlie X"

  • Roger C. Carmel as "Harry Mudd"


Daggit, I know I'm forgetting some actors, here...

 

Looks like it hasn't been posted here yet, so... I'll do the deed.

CONTEXT: the original version was evidently made for an ailing Gene Roddenberry's birthday, and later appeared on the Season 5 DVD. Later, it appears that a fan took the original and tweaked it up a bit, adding music, and producing the crazy masterpiece in the link. I believe there's also a 'behind the scenes' segment with more info, but I wasn't able to find that just now.

And... that's all I know!
Feel free, anyone else, to provide more context / background info. 😊

 

At turns fascinating, insightful, heartbreaking, heartwarming, infuriating and even savage, it's certainly the most interesting ST-themed interview I've ever watched / listened to.

For me, it also tied various ST lore and insider info together (thanks, Memory Alpha!), especially DC Fontana's book, which I recall as being pretty scathing when it came to Gene Roddenberry. But after watching this two-parter, I get the sense Gene's lawyer and the network itself had a pretty disastrous, and even cruel influence on the "Great Bird of the Galaxy."

Part two is here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fetcWmpkz14

 

Get the heck out, could you please?
Or not...?

 

His birth father died when Brent was less than a year old, so he took his adopted father's name "Mintz" from 1955-1975 before finally reverting back to "Spiner."

AFAIK Spiner wasn't actually a photographer as he claimed, but a stage actor living in NYC at the time. Twelve years after the above appearance, he moved to LA and began playing a recurring character on Night Court, "Bob Wheeler," as well as other roles.

This game show is definitely showing its age, and I do find it amusing that they used not just such an ordinary-looking host, but one who also looked about ready for the retirement home. But he does in fact do a fine job I think, and the show itself has a very interesting premise, one in which a panel must try to pick between two imposters and a genuine person.

 

For me-- Lemmy is getting dangerously close to pulling me away from Reddit, and I love it, but still, there's a ways to go in terms of 'critical features,' yeah?

So then, here's two of mine below. What are yours?

  • I'd still very much like to HIDE threads I'm not interested in. Otherwise, no matter what stream I choose (Subscribed | Local | All), I keep seeing the same topics, and it can be downright difficult paging through streams to see new stuff from more communities. That's not good, frankly.

  • I very much want the ability to create *more* custom streams. On Reddit, those streams are called "MultiReddits," and let me tell you, they rock! For instance, my one "Series" multi-reddit consists of these:

/r/1950sx /r/1960sx /r/andykaufmanx /r/Asterixx /r/blackadderx /r/CoenBrothersx /r/Comics_Studiesx /r/DepthHubx /r/fathertedx /r/FawltyTowersx /r/Flintstonesx /r/FoolUsx /r/HannaBarberaCUx /r/Holmesx /r/InconvenienceStorex /r/jimjefferiesx /r/lettermanx /r/ligneclairex /r/Muppetsx /r/newsradiox /r/OldSchoolCelebsx /r/peeweex /r/pennandtellerx /r/philipkDickheadsx /r/postapocalypticx /r/silentmoviegifsx /r/TheAdventuresofTintinx /r/TheFlintstonesx /r/TNGx /r/tosx /r/venturebrosx

So that's just /one/ of my 12+ stream groups ("MultiReddits"), and I love how one can parse them so specifically by community, you know?

I'd absolutely adore it such functionality could extend to Lemmy / the FV, one day.

 
  • Asterius - Terrific, sprawling, puzzle-ish roguelike, easy to play but with lots of secrets to discover, and a long learning curve to win. (note: I've written a guide with hints, which I'd only recommend using as a last resort)

  • Bounty Hunter Space Lizard - Ah, so delicious. It's a fun roguelike, a bit like Pixel Dungeon, but with more condensed runs, and loads of character. As with PD, you'll move through different stages and battle different end-bosses.

(thanks for reading; the other 18 are in the link)

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