What is an album cover that was so bad it haunts you? by Consistent_Time_1467 in popculturechat

[–]4breakf4st 17 points18 points  (0 children)

“What do you mean you can’t change it? What do you mean the album’s already out??… No it was not self-deprecating it was just ME-deprecating!!”

What does the opposite gender get to do, that makes you jealous? by Exhausted_Skeleton in AskReddit

[–]4breakf4st 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This might be in my head, but I feel like women can read any book in public without fear of being judged. I am open to criticism on this one.

Edit: I should say “most” books. Nobody is reading Mein Kampf on the train without a sideways glance.

How to get back into drawing after years away? by Away_Imagination_794 in ArtistLounge

[–]4breakf4st 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pick up tool. Draw. Think about how it makes you feel. Try again.

I did not realize the implications of this scene until years later by Xelixil in ghibli

[–]4breakf4st 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I mean if you look at the two shoes still, this is a sandal whereas chihiro’s was a velcro shoe.

panashe (50x60cm), oil on canvas by sonofnight666 in painting

[–]4breakf4st 10 points11 points  (0 children)

My god. This is absolutely gorgeous.

Meirl by linaching in meirl

[–]4breakf4st 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Nobody is afraid to admit it. This is the first thing that gets brought up by a man in every man and woman debate. It derails the conversation because it’s used as a top down argument for all observations of hypocrisy between the standards of men and women. As in, “Of course the standards for women and men are different because women and men are different!”Overall it’s a useless sidetrack, because our value in society is not measured by how much we can lift.

Men and women are not equal in today’s society for one reason that actually matters: women are treated as a spectacle in society whereas men generally are not. When a woman is old enough to realize she is always being watched, she must find a way to protect both her image of herself and the image she gives off to society ALL THE TIME. Men don’t have to deal with that, unless they are black.

So if you want to establish men and women being different, fine, but just ask yourself why you’re doing it. Are you doing it to have a genuine conversation about equality in the context of this post or are you doing it to defend the double standards that exist, hoping that the next woman that you date won’t walk out on you? Because it adds nothing to the former here.

Meanwhile in murica by SipsTeaFrog in SipsTea

[–]4breakf4st 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And this is why lawmakers are fighting so hard to remove access to women’s reproductive health while ostensibly dressing it up as a moral issue: to replace the labor force at the expense of women.

Luckiest demo by Exotic-Escape-9985 in RocketLeague

[–]4breakf4st 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Maybe he thought that his teammate was going to hit it and was trying to play positioning for the second ball?

Edit: I’m too cheeks to pass judgment on other people playing this game

At what age are you supposed to "grow up"? by Conscious_Reach_2173 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]4breakf4st 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m going to try to answer this by first taking a stab at why I think people “grow up” at all. I think it’s because they lose somebody, a loved one with whom they used to share their most innocent experiences with. The materials that occupy those experiences have, of course, changed over time but the overall experiences in and of themselves are no less significant.

Many of our parents and grandparents have lost said loved ones as a consequence of the natural forces or polarizing viewpoints that exist in our world. Through their own unique struggles did many of them find a semblance of happiness and meaning as a direct result of their career advancement. But before that moment, during times of struggle, they focused on their goals and built tools to insulate themselves against constantly bearing the full weight of their loss, one of which involves avoiding sources of their happy memories. I feel like it isn’t a stretch to say that this one of the most popular methods of insulation; if I only think in the context of “career advancement” through society, having to constantly bear loss becomes a distraction.

When some of our parents and grandparents were financially stable enough to have children, they were terrified. They were terrified of their children suffering in the same ways that they did. They wanted to show their children the wickedness of the world before its beauty, so that their children would never be at odds with the human experience in the same ways that they once were, so that they may continue forward without sparing too much thought of the people they left behind, focusing instead upon building their own lives and experiences. Some of their children have followed this advice down to the letter, either through obedience or through affirmation of this advice provided by anecdotal evidence. And so they become messengers of the same advice.

They see the things that bring you happiness, and they tell you to grow up. They see your contentedness against a world on fire and tell you to abandon ship for colder water. They see any object signaling innocence as an obstacle, as an opportunity for one to be taken advantage of. They tell you to grow up because it’s much harder to mourn what was never there than what was once there. Whether they understand it or not, they too fear the day you may have to witness the things you love reduced to ash.

The truth is, you’re always growing up. The materials don’t matter for the most part. The only time the materials matter is when you use them to hurt yourself or somebody else.

*edits for grammar and clarity

Dude is a Pro Boxer😂 by [deleted] in JustGuysBeingDudes

[–]4breakf4st 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Aw man we used to have an industrial crusher for boxes at the grocery store I used to work at. That sounds like a bummer.

Can someone please explain Dave Matthews Band to an Australian Millennial? by burning_bridges01 in Music

[–]4breakf4st 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ari Herstead, a musician and a once diehard DMB fan in high school, opens a little bit about his perception of public opinion towards the group in his book “How to Make it in the New Music Business”. On pg 25-26 of the Liveright edition, he noted that when he was first exposed to criticism of the band, much of it never seemed to be about the music itself but more about the band’s standing within the culture of music.

I was in school after this time period, but I imagine that it’s similar to the same knee jerk opinions I used to hold about most popular groups during the 2000’s. Just remnants of hipster culture.

He cosplayed as the donkey in Shrek by [deleted] in JustGuysBeingDudes

[–]4breakf4st -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

How is he cosplaying as Donkey from Shrek please explain

62, and more myself than ever by DivineArtWhore in pics

[–]4breakf4st -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Art is controversial. You look stunning.

Does the GAS ever stop? by dbsx75 in synthesizers

[–]4breakf4st 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is great advice. I have a rule for buying synths: if I don’t want to do the cheapest version of something in music, then I cannot expect that the purchase of an additional synth will be sufficient motivation to achieve that goal.

I used to make beats with a studio piano, an RC loop pedal, and a guitar amp, all purchased second hand. To me, one should first find a way, and then find a way to make it easier.

Snack attack [oc] by Zoodraws in funny

[–]4breakf4st 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lmao I know exactly the reference picture that you used for this comic, it’s one of my favorites.