Girl gets herself committed to an asylum by just acting slightly crazy until the police pick her up and send her to an institution
I love the way she writes dialogue:
"Come here, girl, and lift your veil," called out Judge Duffy, in tones which surprised me by a harshness which I did not think from the kindly face he possessed.
"Who are you speaking to?" I inquired, in my stateliest manner.
"Come here, my dear, and lift your veil. You know the Queen of England, if she were here, would have to lift her veil," he said, very kindly.
"That is much better," I replied. "I am not the Queen of England, but I'll lift my veil."
As I did so the little judge looked at me, and then, in a very kind and gentle tone, he said:
"My dear child, what is wrong?"
"Nothing is wrong except that I have lost my trunks, and this man," indicating Policeman Bockert, "promised to bring me where they could be found."
"What do you know about this child?" asked the judge, sternly, of Mrs. Stanard, who stood, pale and trembling, by my side.
"I know nothing of her except that she came to the home yesterday and asked to remain overnight."
"The home! What do you mean by the home?" asked Judge Duffy, quickly.
"It is a temporary home kept for working women at No. 84 Second Avenue."
"What is your position there?"
"I am assistant matron."
"Well, tell us all you know of the case."
"When I was going into the home yesterday I noticed her coming down the avenue. She was all alone. I had just got into the house when the bell rang and she came in. When I talked with her she wanted to know if she could stay all night, and I said she could. After awhile she said all the people in the house looked crazy, and she was afraid of them. Then she would not go to bed, but sat up all the night."
"Had she any money?"
"Yes," I replied, answering for her, "I paid her for everything, and the eating was the worst I ever tried."
There was a general smile at this, and some murmurs of "She's not so crazy on the food question."
"Poor child," said Judge Duffy, "she is well dressed, and a lady. Her English is perfect, and I would stake everything on her being a good girl. I am positive she is somebody's darling."
At this announcement everybody laughed, and I put my handkerchief over my face and endeavored to choke the laughter that threatened to spoil my plans, in despite of my resolutions.
"I mean she is some woman's darling," hastily amended the judge. "I am sure some one is searching for her. Poor girl, I will be good to her, for she looks like my sister, who is dead."
There was a hush for a moment after this announcement, and the officers glanced at me more kindly, while I silently blessed the kind-hearted judge, and hoped that any poor creatures who might be afflicted as I pretended to be should have as kindly a man to deal with as Judge Duffy.
"I wish the reporters were here," he said at last. "They would be able to find out something about her."
I got very much frightened at this, for if there is any one who can ferret out a mystery it is a reporter. I felt that I would rather face a mass of expert doctors, policemen, and detectives than two bright specimens of my craft, so I said:
"I don't see why all this is needed to help me find my trunks. These men are impudent, and I do not want to be stared at. I will go away. I don't want to stay here."
So saying, I pulled down my veil and secretly hoped the reporters would be detained elsewhere until I was sent to the asylum.
"I don't know what to do with the poor child," said the worried judge. "She must be taken care of."
"Send her to the Island," suggested one of the officers.
"Oh, don't!" said Mrs. Stanard, in evident alarm. "Don't! She is a lady and it would kill her to be put on the Island."
For once I felt like shaking the good woman. To think the Island was just the place I wanted to reach and here she was trying to keep me from going there! It was very kind of her, but rather provoking under the circumstances.
A trap is for fish: when you've got the fish, you can forget the trap. A snare is for rabbits: when you've got the rabbit, you can forget the snare. Words are for meaning: when you've got the meaning, you can forget the words.
EM, if I quit around the start of season 3 did I make a good decision? Because it seemed like they were just like 'lol, we dunno what to do so lol they are now doing this'
Basically yeah
the last two seasons were the writers jerking off and - this is how i think it is best explained - regurgitating fragments and trappings of meaningful scenes and ideas from other shows and movies and books, going through the motions of meaning and narrative without actually achieving it, creating something completely hollow and believing they were making something powerful and profound
instead of thinking about it and working at it and crafting it they were just going with their gut
GUTS ARE FILLED WITH PUKE GUYS
USE YOUR BRAIN WHEN YOU WRITE
JESUS CHRIST
Evil Multifarious on
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OnTheLastCastlelet's keep it haimish for the peripateticRegistered Userregular
Writing is hard, but yeah, they were professionals making a professional show so they should've had their shit together.
Also if you pretend green doesn't exist, then the story is actually:
Shepard shoots the Illusive Man, then blows the Reapers the fuck away after flipping the bird to the star kid.
Then in my headcanon, is picked up by Normandy after jumping off the exploding Citadel into space, only survives it just fine because fuck it, he survived the first time and now is even more cyborg.
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GnomeTankWhat the what?Portland, OregonRegistered Userregular
The people writing BSG just had no idea what the fuck they were doing. They literally had no idea about communicating their themes or fulfilling an overarching plot.
They made it up as they went along. They admitted this, proudly.
When asked about a dramatic, apparently symbolic scene, the writer said "I don't know what it means, I just thought it seemed pretty neat"
He had no fucking idea what he was doing and he just put a fluttering bird in there
It was a hot mess
I dunno. I thought up until Season 3, it was going along fine. Things mostly made sense, the plotlines were moving along, there were some great "Oh hey, you know, you would really have to deal with that in this situation" moments. It really came off the rails after New Caprica if you ask me.
The people writing BSG just had no idea what the fuck they were doing. They literally had no idea about communicating their themes or fulfilling an overarching plot.
They made it up as they went along. They admitted this, proudly.
When asked about a dramatic, apparently symbolic scene, the writer said "I don't know what it means, I just thought it seemed pretty neat"
He had no fucking idea what he was doing and he just put a fluttering bird in there
It was a hot mess
I dunno. I thought up until Season 3, it was going along fine. Things mostly made sense, the plotlines were moving along, there were some great "Oh hey, you know, you would really have to deal with that in this situation" moments. It really came off the rails after New Caprica if you ask me.
it was actually excellent for the early parts of the show, yeah, which is why it's infuriating that it entirely collapsed
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OnTheLastCastlelet's keep it haimish for the peripateticRegistered Userregular
Anytime a series has to
skip a bunch of years OUT OF NOWHERE and put the characters in wildly different situations than they were just minutes before of air time...
It's time to turn it off.
Which is what I did with BSG.
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OnTheLastCastlelet's keep it haimish for the peripateticRegistered Userregular
The miniseries and first episode of BSG with them running is amazing.
Like first episode of Friday Night Lights good.
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AManFromEarthLet's get to twerk!The King in the SwampRegistered Userregular
If they had ended BSG the way they ended it,
but scrapped the Luddite shit it would've been mostly fine. been mostly fine.
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surrealitychecklonely, but not unloveddreaming of faulty keys and latchesRegistered Userregular
The people writing BSG just had no idea what the fuck they were doing. They literally had no idea about communicating their themes or fulfilling an overarching plot.
They made it up as they went along. They admitted this, proudly.
When asked about a dramatic, apparently symbolic scene, the writer said "I don't know what it means, I just thought it seemed pretty neat"
He had no fucking idea what he was doing and he just put a fluttering bird in there
It was a hot mess
no but dont you see thats just ripe for critical analysis
I will give a pass (not a cookie, but a pass) for a lame or meandering ending as they struggle to reach their destination. Mark Twain, I forgive you for Huck Finn. You just didn't know how to end it. It's OK. You said what you needed to say on the river and it was beautiful and no one will ever forget it, even though they will be annoyed that the story goes on for 100 pages after that.
However.
I do not give passes for smirking, arch, "look at how bright my ideas are" endings when they are handled poorly and cleave against the narrative that has occurred to that point.
There is a reason I consider the BSG ending to be weak but acceptable even as most of you consider it high treason.
Meanwhile a lot of you guys thought the directors ending to "Dodgeball" was funny, and I was violently offended by it.
skip a bunch of years OUT OF NOWHERE and put the characters in wildly different situations than they were just minutes before of air time...
It's time to turn it off.
Which is what I did with BSG.
Huh, that happened?
I do not remember that.
uh what
they go from space to a planet they've been on for over a year and half the characters are still in space on a ship that has long left and cylons took the planet over and lol
skip a bunch of years OUT OF NOWHERE and put the characters in wildly different situations than they were just minutes before of air time...
It's time to turn it off.
Which is what I did with BSG.
Huh, that happened?
I do not remember that.
uh what
they go from space to a planet they've been on for over a year and half the characters are still in space on a ship that has long left and cylons took the planet over and lol
how do you not remember that
Gnome beat you to it, but it's because I convinced myself to forget that entire arc happened.
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CambiataCommander ShepardThe likes of which even GAWD has never seenRegistered Userregular
@Regina Fong I see you choose the only correct ending to ME3. Good on ye. /nod nod
Peace to fashion police, I wear my heart
On my sleeve, let the runway start
I will give a pass (not a cookie, but a pass) for a lame or meandering ending as they struggle to reach their destination. Mark Twain, I forgive you for Huck Finn. You just didn't know how to end it. It's OK. You said what you needed to say on the river and it was beautiful and no one will ever forget it, even though they will be annoyed that the story goes on for 100 pages after that.
However.
I do not give passes for smirking, arch, "look at how bright my ideas are" endings when they are handled poorly and cleave against the narrative that has occurred to that point.
There is a reason I consider the BSG ending to be weak but acceptable even as most of you consider it high treason.
Meanwhile a lot of you guys thought the directors ending to "Dodgeball" was funny, and I was violently offended by it.
The thing with BSG is that it's not just like a well written show with a bad ending
The bad ending is just another symptom of the writing problems and lack of forethought throughout that entire show
A trap is for fish: when you've got the fish, you can forget the trap. A snare is for rabbits: when you've got the rabbit, you can forget the snare. Words are for meaning: when you've got the meaning, you can forget the words.
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OnTheLastCastlelet's keep it haimish for the peripateticRegistered Userregular
Underdogs do usually lose. It's because they're not favored statistically to win.
Re: ME3 endings and why I don't buy indoctrination
Once you start questioning the reality of events, there is no reason to stop. If you buy the existence of the entity, there is little reason not to buy its characterization, which in turn suggests that it has no reason to lie to you. It doesn't have a skin in the game aside from ideology, and I think the fact that it is willing to let you make a choice is reasonably convincing.
More concretely, the blue and green endings just don't make sense if indoctrination is true, as I mentioned before.
It's a nice idea but it isn't borne out by the actual mechanics of the ending.
I'm a little confused
If shepherd is indoctrinated how do the blue and green endings not make sense? They are the trap choices.
I absolutely agree that indoctrination doesn't fit as a valid alternative ending btw
I tend to feel that endings to things need to avoid being too final. I mean, life doesn't really end even after you die - it goes on, and new stories happen.
Like, a good ending should acknowledge that more things will probably happen in the future in the story of that world.
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OnTheLastCastlelet's keep it haimish for the peripateticRegistered Userregular
So it seems to me, a true underdog story having the protagonists lose would be appropriate to reality, if not our hearts.
This was a movie who had a character that thought he was a pirate so I'm not scrutinizing it too hard.
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AManFromEarthLet's get to twerk!The King in the SwampRegistered Userregular
Today will be a day long remembered, it has seen the death of Rubio's political ambitions and will soon see the death of this bottle of scotch.
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OnTheLastCastlelet's keep it haimish for the peripateticRegistered Userregular
For instance, in NCAA basketball:
0- The number of times the No. 16 seed has topped the No. 1 seed. They’ve now had 108 chances, but they have yet to pull it off. In 1996 Western Carolina lost just 73-71 to first-seeded Purdue. They had two great looks at a three-pointer to win it, but they couldn’t quite get it to fall.
0- The number of times a No. 12 seed has beaten a No. 1 seed. The 12 seed may be a good pick for a round or two, but they haven’t proven able to get past the top-seeded team. The No. 12 seed is 0-18 all-time against the No. 1 seed.
I will give a pass (not a cookie, but a pass) for a lame or meandering ending as they struggle to reach their destination. Mark Twain, I forgive you for Huck Finn. You just didn't know how to end it. It's OK. You said what you needed to say on the river and it was beautiful and no one will ever forget it, even though they will be annoyed that the story goes on for 100 pages after that.
However.
I do not give passes for smirking, arch, "look at how bright my ideas are" endings when they are handled poorly and cleave against the narrative that has occurred to that point.
There is a reason I consider the BSG ending to be weak but acceptable even as most of you consider it high treason.
Meanwhile a lot of you guys thought the directors ending to "Dodgeball" was funny, and I was violently offended by it.
The thing with BSG is that it's not just like a well written show with a bad ending
The bad ending is just another symptom of the writing problems and lack of forethought throughout that entire show
It is not a "bad ending"
It is a bad, what, like 1 season or 1.5 or 2 seasons at the end.
Because the show continued past the point where they had already done what they needed to do and said what they needed to say.
It was just like the last 100 pages of Huckleberry Finn.
It just existed to annoy you and kind of detract from the awesome that came before.
But in no way does it undo the work itself.
I watched all the way to the end and no i was not fucking thrilled by how it ended on Earth. I preferred the original ending where they just were in orbit of that other Earth, before they went down and found it to be rubble.
That was probably where the show needed to end. Humans and Cyclons united, war-weary, with an understanding of just how much their conflict devastated them and how it helped nothing at any point and had no value whatsoever.
Posts
also what degree do you have in econ
Girl gets herself committed to an asylum by just acting slightly crazy until the police pick her up and send her to an institution
I love the way she writes dialogue:
Basically yeah
the last two seasons were the writers jerking off and - this is how i think it is best explained - regurgitating fragments and trappings of meaningful scenes and ideas from other shows and movies and books, going through the motions of meaning and narrative without actually achieving it, creating something completely hollow and believing they were making something powerful and profound
instead of thinking about it and working at it and crafting it they were just going with their gut
GUTS ARE FILLED WITH PUKE GUYS
USE YOUR BRAIN WHEN YOU WRITE
JESUS CHRIST
Also if you pretend green doesn't exist, then the story is actually:
Then in my headcanon, is picked up by Normandy after jumping off the exploding Citadel into space, only survives it just fine because fuck it, he survived the first time and now is even more cyborg.
I dunno. I thought up until Season 3, it was going along fine. Things mostly made sense, the plotlines were moving along, there were some great "Oh hey, you know, you would really have to deal with that in this situation" moments. It really came off the rails after New Caprica if you ask me.
it was actually excellent for the early parts of the show, yeah, which is why it's infuriating that it entirely collapsed
It's time to turn it off.
Which is what I did with BSG.
Like first episode of Friday Night Lights good.
no but dont you see thats just ripe for critical analysis
I will give a pass (not a cookie, but a pass) for a lame or meandering ending as they struggle to reach their destination. Mark Twain, I forgive you for Huck Finn. You just didn't know how to end it. It's OK. You said what you needed to say on the river and it was beautiful and no one will ever forget it, even though they will be annoyed that the story goes on for 100 pages after that.
However.
I do not give passes for smirking, arch, "look at how bright my ideas are" endings when they are handled poorly and cleave against the narrative that has occurred to that point.
There is a reason I consider the BSG ending to be weak but acceptable even as most of you consider it high treason.
Meanwhile a lot of you guys thought the directors ending to "Dodgeball" was funny, and I was violently offended by it.
YEAH YOU LIKE THAT MOTHERFUCKER he would say
HAVE SOME MOTHERFUCKING ENGLISH BREAKFAST UP IN YO GRILL
I'M GOING TO SHOOT YOU WITH HUGE SPACE LASERS REAL SOON
Huh, that happened?
I do not remember that.
Ex Machina.
have you read Ex Machina yet?
I mean, isn't this basically what Mass Effect is about? Shepard repeatedly doing this to various nefarious entities, metaphorically?
I took it down since nobody was commenting on it :rotate:
it's back
Counterpoint: The Young Justice cartoon, which is excellent.
that poem
so fucking good
like when you read it out your mouth overflows with kinetic, physical richness
a lyrical syrup pouring from your lips
I think he means on New Caprica, when things skip forward four months after the Cylon occupation. Between seasons two and three, I believe.
uh what
how do you not remember that
er,
and why is it a terrible idea? There's nothing inherently wrong with it.
-Indiana Solo, runner of blades
It's a weird ass comedy movie either way.
On my sleeve, let the runway start
The one where stiller wins is the director's original ending, which audiences hated and was subsequently changed.
The reason it offends me is that it is an hour and a half of film and the payoff is that it's a play on the subtitle "a true underdog story."
Because, hah hah, this is so funny you guys, a true underdog would actually lose, not win! hah hah hah
Fuck that guy.
I guess if you can't see how that's lazy/unfocused writing then we've got nothing to say. Since the writer have admitted they had literally no plan...
The thing with BSG is that it's not just like a well written show with a bad ending
The bad ending is just another symptom of the writing problems and lack of forethought throughout that entire show
I'm a little confused
I absolutely agree that indoctrination doesn't fit as a valid alternative ending btw
Like, a good ending should acknowledge that more things will probably happen in the future in the story of that world.
This was a movie who had a character that thought he was a pirate so I'm not scrutinizing it too hard.
0- The number of times the No. 16 seed has topped the No. 1 seed. They’ve now had 108 chances, but they have yet to pull it off. In 1996 Western Carolina lost just 73-71 to first-seeded Purdue. They had two great looks at a three-pointer to win it, but they couldn’t quite get it to fall.
0- The number of times a No. 12 seed has beaten a No. 1 seed. The 12 seed may be a good pick for a round or two, but they haven’t proven able to get past the top-seeded team. The No. 12 seed is 0-18 all-time against the No. 1 seed.
So yeah. Underdogs are so named for a reason.
http://www.docsports.com/current/ncaa-tournament-seed-history.html
how bad was he? bad enough that i should go grab a drink and watch it?
It is not a "bad ending"
It is a bad, what, like 1 season or 1.5 or 2 seasons at the end.
Because the show continued past the point where they had already done what they needed to do and said what they needed to say.
It was just like the last 100 pages of Huckleberry Finn.
It just existed to annoy you and kind of detract from the awesome that came before.
But in no way does it undo the work itself.
I watched all the way to the end and no i was not fucking thrilled by how it ended on Earth. I preferred the original ending where they just were in orbit of that other Earth, before they went down and found it to be rubble.
That was probably where the show needed to end. Humans and Cyclons united, war-weary, with an understanding of just how much their conflict devastated them and how it helped nothing at any point and had no value whatsoever.
I'll check it if I can find it. I just preordered Vol. 2 of the Projects, which should get to me in April.
Thereby becoming what they were created to stop from happening.
And a bit of messing with "God's Plan" thrown in
It’s not a very important country most of the time
http://steamcommunity.com/id/mortious