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King Gizzard and the Lizard [chat]

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    cptruggedcptrugged I think it has something to do with free will. Registered User regular
    Atomika wrote: »
    Atomika wrote: »
    i'm not sure what isn't appealing about it aside from those genre tropes. it's good for the same reason that dystopian fiction is good.

    Okay but I don’t generally care for dystopian fiction, really.

    is this because you think it's bad or because you'd rather not read/watch doom and gloom when there's plenty of doom and gloom oppressing us in our actual lives

    Both?

    There’s something about cyberpunk that seems to glorify the squalor and misery of its setting, and if I’m being honest a lot of it is marred by growing up watching the generation only a little older than me caught up in entertainment where maladjusted antiheroes with shitty goatees and black trenchcoats fought ninja robots in dingy gutters . . . because it looked cool. So much of nerd culture during my tween years seemed like this, and it felt try-hard and hilariously oblivious and not a little tied to the same solipsistic assholes that would later coelesce into the festering clot of the internet’s nice guy/fedora/incel/neckbeard neighborhood.

    I know I joke about being the oldest millennial, but while barely true, I identify as such because I identify with millennials and their lives and culture far more than I do GenX. I like bright, poppy, optimistic, inclusive shit. I like media that brings people together over shared interests and common goals. I like to laugh and smile and promote that in others. I like goofy shit. I don’t want to think about all the creative ways shit can get bleak; I want to celebrate all the ways we can do good with a genuine goddamn smile on my face.

    Well let me give you another take on it.

    The big rise of the anti hero and dingy gutters was a direct rebellion to finding out the promises of our parents that culminated in the messages in our youth were all bullshit. Gen X cynicism isn't rooted in some random turn (though some of it probably is). It's rooted in finding out the villains aren't like Cobra and Mum-Ra, but the banker in the high rise destroying lives. And the heroes aren't like Superman, and maybe non existent.

    So the idea that the hero wasn't the super patriotic super good guy our parents told us heroes were made sense. The world wasn't hoo ra Reagan Morning In America and stories that stopped selling that lie became more appealing.

    Listen, I get it. I mostly hate the 90s and Xtreme Antiheroes. But that wasn't just some neckbeard shit. But a real reaction to the bullshit we saw behind the veil of the pretty things our folks shoveled at us.

    Just like your optimistic, bright, poppy shit is a direct reaction to ours. Hell, it's pretty much a re tread of all the bright poppy shit of my youth. It's just that yours is trying harder to not have that bullshit veneer that drove my generation to a place where our defining factor is overblown cynicism.

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    NecoNeco Worthless Garbage Registered User regular
    Credeiki how I be good at word like you doing

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    QanamilQanamil x Registered User regular
    They have police 'fuck you citizen' circles on their walls!

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    emnmnmeemnmnme Registered User regular
    A punk who is cyber.
    z31vhqiukka9.jpg

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    BurnageBurnage Registered User regular
    Bogart wrote: »
    The Fifth Element is not particularly dystopian. I mean, Corbin Dallas has a small apartment, but hey ho.

    I mean, if having cramped living conditions made for a dystopia, then that would mean that the UK was a dysto-

    Wait

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    Element BrianElement Brian Peanut Butter Shill Registered User regular
    Demolition Man

    Switch FC code:SW-2130-4285-0059

    Arch,
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_goGR39m2k
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    BogartBogart Streetwise Hercules Registered User, Moderator Mod Emeritus
    There are lots of pulpy things you can read or watch that aren't entirely free of nutrition or stimulus.

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    EddyEddy Gengar the Bittersweet Registered User regular
    I like cyberpunk

    "and the morning stars I have seen
    and the gengars who are guiding me" -- W.S. Merwin
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    Fuzzy Cumulonimbus CloudFuzzy Cumulonimbus Cloud Registered User regular
    johnny 5 no disassemble

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    HonkHonk Honk is this poster. Registered User, __BANNED USERS regular
    Bogart wrote: »
    The Fifth Element is not particularly dystopian. I mean, Corbin Dallas has a small apartment, but hey ho.
    i think having to wear toilet paper as an outfit is pretty dystopian

    If that was toilet paper it was easily 5+ ply and therefore it can’t be a dystopia.

    PSN: Honkalot
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    KruiteKruite Registered User regular
    Bogart wrote: »
    The Fifth Element is not particularly dystopian. I mean, Corbin Dallas has a small apartment, but hey ho.

    Look, when you admit you are a meat popsicle in a rundown tiny apartment is say its dystopian

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    milskimilski Poyo! Registered User regular
    The real cyberpunk dystopia is having a work lunch completely dominated by my coworkers trying to convince my boss to buy bitcoin

    I ate an engineer
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    QanamilQanamil x Registered User regular
    Also I don't really remember Stainless Steel Rat that well so you're probs right there, Bogart.

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    KrathoonKrathoon Registered User regular
    The automated apartment in Fifth Element was cool.

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    BurnageBurnage Registered User regular
    I also question whether the millennial "tone" is bright, poppy, and optimistic; I'd have been more likely to peg it as nihilistic absurdism

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    Fuzzy Cumulonimbus CloudFuzzy Cumulonimbus Cloud Registered User regular
    Bogart wrote: »
    There are lots of pulpy things you can read or watch that aren't entirely free of nutrition or stimulus.
    for example:
    The Xanth series

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    JuliusJulius Captain of Serenity on my shipRegistered User regular
    How can something written awfully be an enjoyable read

    What's the point of reading a book if you can't nod and mutter "hm yes I am very smart because this is the book I am reading"

    the real point is feeling smug about knowing better than the author.

    "ah, I see that the author holds to a common flawed interpretation of Nietzsche's Jenseits von Gut und Böse. How amusing."

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    Evil MultifariousEvil Multifarious Registered User regular
    desc wrote: »
    I guess I should in theory give ready player one a chance but every excerpt I've read has made my brain start bleeding

    I dunno if I would be able to power through it if every excerpt I've read has been illustrative of the whole thing

    It seems like Joseph Campbell + some guy reading TV Tropes to you

    I think people give it too much shit. It's just massively popular and that has created a backlash against it.

    It's just like The Dresden Files or those trashy Forgotten Realms books that were being written in the 90s, it just doesn't pretend to be anything but what it is. It is absolutely just a bunch of '80s references in a book wrapped in a young adult adventure story. It's not trying to be anything else, and yes it is written poorly.

    But despite all of that, I managed to enjoy it.

    you have now named Ready Player One, Dresden Files, Forgotten Realms novels, and Transformers films--all absolutely things that are bad enough that people shouldn't waste their time on them, even if they're looking for silly pulpy fun

    And yet, enough people have bought all of those things to turn them into massive successes.

    popularity has little bearing on quality; i feel like that's a truism

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    credeikicredeiki Registered User regular
    Neco wrote: »
    Credeiki how I be good at word like you doing

    My current prolixity is 100% born of procrastination

    I feel like I'm doing work if I put some effort into sentence construction and then go on a bit more than is strictly needed

    ...it's definitely not work...

    Steam, LoL: credeiki
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    Jubal77Jubal77 Registered User regular
    edited January 2018
    Bogart wrote: »
    The Fifth Element is not particularly dystopian. I mean, Corbin Dallas has a small apartment, but hey ho.

    Its in the background. But its there. He lives in a shit hole with a shit job and is brought into an adventure from a girl who was reconstructed with just her hand left after getting blown up. The darkness of the world is masked by 90s horrible colors/cringy fashion meant to show off a the upper class living why the remainder live in squalor. As shown during the times up to his adventure start.

    Jubal77 on
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    SpawnbrokerSpawnbroker Registered User regular
    I've always thought of cyberpunk the genre being a literary reaction to the Golden Age of science fiction. The Golden Age writers mostly celebrated scientific achievements of the time, and cyberpunk started picking up steam right around the time that Dune was released and authors began to explore more complex themes, veering more towards dystopia.

    Cyberpunk as a genre is usually focused on themes like the perils of rapid technological change, post-capitalist dystopias, cyberspace, depressing real-world conditions including overpopulation and climate change, individual alienation, and consumerism.

    Steam: Spawnbroker
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    ShivahnShivahn Unaware of her barrel shifter privilege Western coastal temptressRegistered User, Moderator mod
    VishNub wrote: »
    I belieb
    Shivahn wrote: »
    Arch wrote: »
    Shivahn wrote: »
    Hahnsoo1 wrote: »
    Shivahn wrote: »
    Feral wrote: »
    Shivahn wrote: »
    Arch wrote: »
    XX/XY ain't shit, ZZ/ZW is cool

    Wait actually hmm

    In XY systems that homogametic sex is women, and in ZW the homogametic sex is men

    So XY makes homo ladies and ZW makes homo men

    So choose based on your appropriate juvenile jokes I guess

    Wait don't you have this backwards

    No, he got it right

    Ah yes, he did. I AM SORRY ARCH I WILL NEVER DOUBT U AGAIN
    I will continue to doubt Arch. Can't trust a six-legger.

    You're right

    With their paucity of legs, they will become jealous, and try to steal the legs of the trustworthies

    How dare you! A paucity of legs! I'll have you know that we have reduced the number of legs down to the most efficient and blessed number (3!) and have also made room for wings, so that we can become closer to the divine

    you

    you

    bottom feeder

    Come and get me, motherfucker
    63a0eaaa7efc77df9b4a01f1a113f748.jpg

    Is it correct that Maine lobsters are more related to crayfish than to pacific/spiny lobsters?

    Looks like they're all equally related, i.e., decapoda, along with crabs. But who knows, no one does genetics on them (BUT EVERYONE SHOULD, YOU MOTHERFUCKERS).

    Also that is a crayfish, but it's from New Zealand.

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    BeNarwhalBeNarwhal The Work Left Unfinished Registered User regular
    Famously, the health card that I continue to use to this day because I'm a stubborn ass was issued to me prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union.

    It's not an inconvenience I'm foisting upon you because I'm too lazy to go get the new free card, dear admin worker, it's a piece of history and you shall respect it as such! >_>

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    spool32spool32 Contrary Library Registered User regular
    credeiki wrote: »
    spool32 wrote: »
    man I remember being a young kid and wondering if the contrails in the sky were missiles and this was the end. That shit was real for us.

    I don't think you need to have been born prior to the collapse of the soviet union (to be clear, I was, but I was very small, so) in order to feel and enjoy soviet themes.
    The police state/paranoia/disappearance/bureaucracy themes in Master and Margarita are visceral and horribly chilling even if you didn't live it
    And then having read and internalize that, you can go on to feel the resonance in other works that are maybe less well-written but still draw on those feelings
    In general, you don't have to have personally experienced the themes, events, or settings in a work or game in order to be profoundly affected and moved by them, or in order to feel like they are relevant to you

    I agree with that!

    But with Paranoia, we're talking about a couple of removes and a comedic shift. Humor is a reflection of the times, and it just doesn't hit the mark even if you gathered up enough cultural referential experience to get what people were so scared of.

    It's like a Laurel & Hardy routines now, or watching Bugs Bunny do impressions - they're funny at one remove, not in the way they were for audiences of the day. Even if you've watched every Turner Classic movie, it still won't hit you the same way as it did when it was released.

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    BogartBogart Streetwise Hercules Registered User, Moderator Mod Emeritus
    The Fifth Element, and I think I've said this before, is pretty much the first science fiction film after Blade Runner to radically change the aesthetics of visual SF worlds. It was bright, colourful, fun and the style was utterly unlike the dim, grimy, rainy worlds of most SF at that time.

    People in that world weren't depressed, or angry, or railing against the unfeeling system. They were having instant roast chicken and listening to Ruby Rhod and having sex and having odd slapstick interludes with Lee Evans.

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    TcheldorTcheldor Registered User regular
    credeiki wrote: »
    I found Snow Crash unbearable when I read it. So I might not like Ready Player 1. I did however love The Quantum Thief.

    Heh I definitely thought Snow Crash was pretty cool

    I probably still think it's pretty cool

    I should buy it; I almost certainly don't own it, or at least I haven't seen it around for a long time if I do

    Have you read one of his other books, Diamond Age? It felt similar to Snow Crash to me, and I enjoyed most of it.

    League of Legends: Sorakanmyworld
    FFXIV: Tchel Fay
    Nintendo ID: Tortalius
    Steam: Tortalius
    Stream: twitch.tv/tortalius
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    KruiteKruite Registered User regular
    Shivahn wrote: »
    VishNub wrote: »
    I belieb
    Shivahn wrote: »
    Arch wrote: »
    Shivahn wrote: »
    Hahnsoo1 wrote: »
    Shivahn wrote: »
    Feral wrote: »
    Shivahn wrote: »
    Arch wrote: »
    XX/XY ain't shit, ZZ/ZW is cool

    Wait actually hmm

    In XY systems that homogametic sex is women, and in ZW the homogametic sex is men

    So XY makes homo ladies and ZW makes homo men

    So choose based on your appropriate juvenile jokes I guess

    Wait don't you have this backwards

    No, he got it right

    Ah yes, he did. I AM SORRY ARCH I WILL NEVER DOUBT U AGAIN
    I will continue to doubt Arch. Can't trust a six-legger.

    You're right

    With their paucity of legs, they will become jealous, and try to steal the legs of the trustworthies

    How dare you! A paucity of legs! I'll have you know that we have reduced the number of legs down to the most efficient and blessed number (3!) and have also made room for wings, so that we can become closer to the divine

    you

    you

    bottom feeder

    Come and get me, motherfucker
    63a0eaaa7efc77df9b4a01f1a113f748.jpg

    Is it correct that Maine lobsters are more related to crayfish than to pacific/spiny lobsters?

    Looks like they're all equally related, i.e., decapoda, along with crabs. But who knows, no one does genetics on them (BUT EVERYONE SHOULD, YOU MOTHERFUCKERS).

    Also that is a crayfish, but it's from New Zealand

    How old is it

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    Hahnsoo1Hahnsoo1 Make Ready. We Hunt.Registered User, Moderator mod
    Cyberpunk201X as a genre is usually focused on themes like the perils of rapid technological change, post-capitalist dystopias, cyberspace, depressing real-world conditions including overpopulation and climate change, individual alienation, and consumerism.

    8i1dt37buh2m.png
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    KruiteKruite Registered User regular
    Phone is doing weird stuff guys

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    cptruggedcptrugged I think it has something to do with free will. Registered User regular
    Tcheldor wrote: »
    credeiki wrote: »
    I found Snow Crash unbearable when I read it. So I might not like Ready Player 1. I did however love The Quantum Thief.

    Heh I definitely thought Snow Crash was pretty cool

    I probably still think it's pretty cool

    I should buy it; I almost certainly don't own it, or at least I haven't seen it around for a long time if I do

    Have you read one of his other books, Diamond Age? It felt similar to Snow Crash to me, and I enjoyed most of it.

    Diamond Age started strong, but it was a slog to finish.

    Snow Crash I feel was just a better pace.

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    BogartBogart Streetwise Hercules Registered User, Moderator Mod Emeritus
    Bogart wrote: »
    There are lots of pulpy things you can read or watch that aren't entirely free of nutrition or stimulus.
    for example:
    The Xanth series

    "What happened, Bogart? Why did you delete this user and all his content?"

    "I ... slipped, Tube. Yes. That's it. Slipped."

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    Evil MultifariousEvil Multifarious Registered User regular
    Having written all that, it's interesting how cyberpunk can be about utter dystopian pessimism or about deeply human optimism in a dystopian context. Both feel really authentic in the genre.

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    Sir LandsharkSir Landshark resting shark face Registered User regular
    oh man the xanth series was great

    the quality dipped towards the later books of course, p normal thing, but still had some gems later on like the one that was all a computer game (and I think an actual computer game was based on that book but I never tried it)

    Please consider the environment before printing this post.
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    Element BrianElement Brian Peanut Butter Shill Registered User regular
    Kruite wrote: »
    Phone is doing weird stuff guys

    lick it

    Switch FC code:SW-2130-4285-0059

    Arch,
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_goGR39m2k
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    descdesc Goretexing to death Registered User regular
    Bogart wrote: »
    The Fifth Element, and I think I've said this before, is pretty much the first science fiction film after Blade Runner to radically change the aesthetics of visual SF worlds. It was bright, colourful, fun and the style was utterly unlike the dim, grimy, rainy worlds of most SF at that time.

    People in that world weren't depressed, or angry, or railing against the unfeeling system. They were having instant roast chicken and listening to Ruby Rhod and having sex and having odd slapstick interludes with Lee Evans.

    I am ready for any vision of the future that looks like a mid 90s Janet Jackson video

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    BogartBogart Streetwise Hercules Registered User, Moderator Mod Emeritus
    Cyberpunk is absolutely a reaction to old timey SF, as in Gibson's story The Gernsback Continuum, where an alternate reality based on those old timey worlds nauseatingly intrudes on normality.

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    Hahnsoo1Hahnsoo1 Make Ready. We Hunt.Registered User, Moderator mod
    Kruite wrote: »
    Phone is doing weird stuff guys

    :winky:

    8i1dt37buh2m.png
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    Styrofoam SammichStyrofoam Sammich WANT. normal (not weird)Registered User regular
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    Element BrianElement Brian Peanut Butter Shill Registered User regular
    omg

    Switch FC code:SW-2130-4285-0059

    Arch,
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_goGR39m2k
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    KruiteKruite Registered User regular
    Kruite wrote: »
    Phone is doing weird stuff guys

    lick it

    I fear this may only encourage it

This discussion has been closed.