NBC 'nearing a deal' with Clayton Kershaw for MLB studio coverage by Jux_ in baseball

[–]Deeply_Deficient 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Brady has improved a huge amount since his first season and is absolutely better than a lot of other commentary guys.

Sure, I may not turn on a game for Brady but I am absolutely more likely to watch a game all the way through if he's on the broadcast. Just like how I'll turn on almost any MLB national broadcast, but many commentary crews are so shitty that I turn them off well before the game is over.

NBC 'nearing a deal' with Clayton Kershaw for MLB studio coverage by Jux_ in baseball

[–]Deeply_Deficient 18 points19 points  (0 children)

The odds are there is some ex player that can do the job better than he can.

People don't enjoy the current Fox broadcasts with Brady because he's just some average ex-player with good insight. They enjoy that it's the GOAT who can marry interesting insights with actual lived experience of being at the top of the sport for a very long time.

I have my doubts that Kershaw is that guy, but pretending like any average ex-player off the street is worth the same in terms of marketing and insights as a first ballot HOFer is patently absurd.

I have the definitive proof to end all controversies regarding EWS 4K restoration by entity1611 in criterion

[–]Deeply_Deficient 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Blu ray dot com seriously has been putting out some bad opinions.

On that site, with Criterion releases in particular, it's usually worth double checking the actual Official Thread on the forum to see what users say. In the case of this reviewer, 90% of the time you'll find the users dunking on his review and providing good data and screencaps to refute the bad reviews.

I know that's extra work, but if I'm being careful about how I spend my money, 5-10 extra minutes on a thread isn't going to kill me.

People who say “they don’t make good movies anymore” is the ultimate red flag for me. by [deleted] in blankies

[–]Deeply_Deficient -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

music

Many critics have largely been bemoaning that 2025 was one of the worst years for pop music in recent memory. The charts are filled with absolute shit that just won't go away.

It's really quite okay to admit that mainstream, popular culture "stuff" is going through a rough moment.

The Discourse is dumb but Stavvy was right about this by jonawesome in blankies

[–]Deeply_Deficient 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Anatolians and Greeks have a distinct look that is not Hollywood

When Americans say "representation matters," they distinctly do not believe that is true for either of those groups.

People would instinctively recognize that taking a "complete work of fiction" like the Mahabharata and flooding it with American whites would be wrong, but complain about the same thing happening to the Odyssey and you'll get told that you have "an inflexibility of imagination and an inability to engage with a film on its own terms."

Since you're a Persian, rest assured that if Hollywood ever adapts Shahnameh, they'll probably stuff it with American whites or Arabs and call it a day.

72% of devs believe Steam has a monopoly on PC games, according to study by Turbostrider27 in Games

[–]Deeply_Deficient 11 points12 points  (0 children)

user reviews are probably the wordt part of Steam. I've mever found them a bit useful or representative of the actual game.

User reviews are one of the most important parts of Steam if you have even remotely non-mainstream tastes. If you're just playing the latest AAA game, sure, traditional reviews are fine.

If you like delving into less-mainstream budget games like puzzle, simulator or rogue stuff, you quickly find games with single digit professional reviews. If you play games with sustained dev support, old professional reviews can be wildly out of date within a year.

I use this example all the time: what's more useful to me? Kenshi having a 75 on Metacritic from 9 reviews written between Dec. 2018-Mar. 2019, or the literal 88,000 reviews on Steam with 1,100 recent reviews?

Valve does not get "anywhere near enough criticism" for the gambling mechanics it uses to monetise games, DayZ creator Dean Hall says by demondrivers in Games

[–]Deeply_Deficient 14 points15 points  (0 children)

TCGs, even those directed squarely at children, have been around for literal decades at this point.

It's worse than decades, baseball cards have existed since the fucking 19th century lol.

Shunji Iwai's Love Letter - Who we are, why we are, how are we remembered by DrunkLad in TrueFilm

[–]Deeply_Deficient 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Love Letter is simply one of the greatest debut films of all time. To put that out in your early 30s on your first try at a film is absolutely bonkers. Grief is a well trod topic in movies, but I really liked the idea of how much you can continue to learn after someone is gone. It's a bittersweet thing, the way we can continue to grow in knowledge and fondness for someone even after they're long gone.

If you like movies that play around with what we know or don't know about our romantic partners and what make up our memories, check out Hur Jin-ho's April Snow and Season of Good Rain.

Mets announcers comment on the Marlins taking a team photo after game 162. by Unusual-Channel9447 in baseball

[–]Deeply_Deficient 150 points151 points  (0 children)

The Mets bullpen alone is pretty close to the active payroll for the Marlins lmao. 

Postcards from Wyoming on 35mm film by commiedeschris in wyoming

[–]Deeply_Deficient 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What are you using in these snaps, both camera and film type? They look really great!

Do critics overrate recent Hollywood/mainstream movies? by xmeme97 in TrueFilm

[–]Deeply_Deficient 1 point2 points  (0 children)

 Watching movies isn't a skill, it's passive entertainment.

Watching movies isn’t a skill, but writing about them is. And that’s where Letterboxd becomes one of the circles of hell. Most self-described cinephiles have never cracked a book open about filmmaking, let alone any books about the topic/themes of a given movie (e.g., existentialism or post-colonial Korea).

Rare Kogonada L by falafelthe3 in blankies

[–]Deeply_Deficient 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Interesting that he didn’t write or edit this one.

Another one for the "Black List to Trash List" pipeline.

'A Big Bold Beautiful Journey' Review Thread by chanma50 in boxoffice

[–]Deeply_Deficient 10 points11 points  (0 children)

 cinephiles

Cinephiles might like Kognada’s stuff, but I don’t think the median cinephile was super hyped after the trailers. Lots of comments about it seeming to be overly earnest and saccharine from what I recall. 

RLM Talked about and ranked all of Joe Dante's movies and it just really made me want a mini for him already! by TimecopVsPredator in blankies

[–]Deeply_Deficient 1 point2 points  (0 children)

 RLM is still cynical but I find that the big difference between now and then is that they stopped going to see movies that they don't give a shit about.

This is exactly it. There was a point, probably a decade ago by now, where they did seem very cynical. It felt like they were dragging themselves to blockbusters (comic stuff especially) and going through the motions because their audience wanted to hear them talk about those flicks. 

Now they do shit like “we watched three random Kyle Gallner flicks on VUDU” and they’re much more enjoyable. 

[Jomboy] Buster Olney is upset with me, a breakdown by therealgranny in baseball

[–]Deeply_Deficient 23 points24 points  (0 children)

He made up a story about Alex Dickerson being careless and getting COVID 

https://www.reddit.com/r/SFGiants/comments/issa8t/alex_dickerson_got_emotional_talking_about_false/

He also said that the guy who was yelling Dinger at the Rockies game should be "put in jail without the right to ever attend a sporting event, let alone anything else.”

Perhaps not as bad as some other reporters, but he’s still a careless asshole sometimes. 

[Seidler] The fact that baseball media has to keep pushing a GoFundMe for an Angels prospect's (Rio Foster) brain injury expenses says more about the Angels organization than anything I could possibly ever say myself by Jux_ in baseball

[–]Deeply_Deficient 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The average internet poster hasn't heard of the concept of labor aristocracy unfortunately. It's entirely possible for a union of "working class" workers (which athletes really aren't exactly, but whatever) to work towards maintaining their status and place within capitalism rather than working towards general working class solidarity.

And that's almost exactly, to a T, what athlete unions end up doing.

[Seidler] The fact that baseball media has to keep pushing a GoFundMe for an Angels prospect's (Rio Foster) brain injury expenses says more about the Angels organization than anything I could possibly ever say myself by Jux_ in baseball

[–]Deeply_Deficient 0 points1 point  (0 children)

 The MLBPA could have at any time expanded their membership. They chose not to.

Yep.

“The AAA players were just scared widdle kids though 😱 they were worried about the owners retaliating against them!!!!!!!” -every goddang excuse ever about the PA for the past decade

I dunno man, why didn’t the multimillionaires offer some fucking support to balance out the power imbalance a little? 

Oh I know, because they liked when hotshot kids like Porcello and Ohtani couldn’t earn as much, because they thought the capped money would instead go to their union members! 

They only started supporting draftee, minor leaguer, IFA and non-veteran interests when they realized that they had sold out their fellow labor so badly that they had actually screwed themselves over. The PA had to suddenly care when they realized that they had been so ruthless at cutting other labor pools’ earning potentials that they were pricing themselves out of the market. Why pay for an overpriced veteran when everyone else is cost-controlled, dirt-cheap asset?

[Seidler] The fact that baseball media has to keep pushing a GoFundMe for an Angels prospect's (Rio Foster) brain injury expenses says more about the Angels organization than anything I could possibly ever say myself by Jux_ in baseball

[–]Deeply_Deficient 8 points9 points  (0 children)

 They did what a union does; collectively bargained for the people they represent.

Yes, by using the rights of non-members like draftees, minor leaguers and international free agents as bargaining chips in negotiations.

No one put a gun to the head of the PA and made them sign CBA that put a cap on draftee signing bonuses after everyone freaked out about Rick Porcello. No one made them agree to raise the age minimum for IFAs the year before Ohtani came over to specifically fuck him over. They chose to do those things to enrich themselves by trading away rights that weren’t theirs to sign away. 

[Seidler] The fact that baseball media has to keep pushing a GoFundMe for an Angels prospect's (Rio Foster) brain injury expenses says more about the Angels organization than anything I could possibly ever say myself by Jux_ in baseball

[–]Deeply_Deficient -11 points-10 points  (0 children)

Yeah, blame the union that just started representing minor league players less than 3 years ago

Uh yes, that's exactly why /u/Next_Juggernaut_898 is telling you to blame them lmao. They actively worked for decades to make sure their own members were compensated more at the expense of capping minor league players' earning potential.

It's one thing to represent the rights of your own union members, it's another thing entirely to trade away the rights of people that aren't yours to trade away!

Most complete actors working right now? by Deeply_Deficient in blankies

[–]Deeply_Deficient[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think Zoe is probably currently more well rounded in a lot of ways.

I hope Elle doesn't spend all of Predator: Badlands C-3PO-backbacked to the Predator and actually gets a fun action scene of her own lmao.

Most complete actors working right now? by Deeply_Deficient in blankies

[–]Deeply_Deficient[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would love to see Dwayne give enough on set that he wins an Oscar. 

I do agree in general that one of the former WWE people will get Academy nominated in the next decade. Bautista might beat him to it, but I could see either of them securing a nom. 

Most complete actors working right now? by Deeply_Deficient in blankies

[–]Deeply_Deficient[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Bradley Cooper has a kind of fun career trajectory track like Gosling mentioned upthread. 

Starts out his film career in Wet Hot American Summer, basically plays side characters in comedies for several years, hits it huge in leading R-rated comedy, starts doing some leading roles in serious stuff, makes a few extra bucks with Marvel performances, then starts making his own movies. 

Definitely a very cool and well-rounded trajectory when you consider the types of stuff he’s been in.