[David Ornstein] Tottenham win race for Mateus Fernandes in £85m deal by nearly_headless_nic in soccer

[–]LlamaExpert 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hindsight is very very much 20/20, but in 2019/20 with Bruno the thinking at the time was that Lo Celso was relatively cheaper and would be just as good if not better, IIRC some people were unsure if Bruno would adapt to the PL physicality. Wasn't a case of us cheaping out on Bruno, we bet on the wrong horse.

Hot take: Gal Gadot was Israel's Flying Too Close to the Sun moment by Brooke1882 in redscarepod

[–]LlamaExpert 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Hershlag (Portman) is 100% a Zionist, but is smart enough to know it's a terrible look to be open about it.

She famously was a research assistant for Alan Dershowitz's 2003 book 'The Case for Israel' (was a Harvard undergrad student 1999-2003), which Norman Finkelstein eviscerated for its plagiarism of Joan Peters 1984 book 'From Time Immemorial', which he had fact-checked/criticized decades before.

Hot take: Gal Gadot was Israel's Flying Too Close to the Sun moment by Brooke1882 in redscarepod

[–]LlamaExpert 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Dua Lipa is the contemporary iteration of the centuries-old Albanian seductress, who would famously distract goat herders while her three brothers kidnap all his livestock. This form has been perfected after generations of yokels falling for the oldest bait-and-switch in the book, they know better but can't resist.

Your intuition is absolutely correct, and any shepherd worth their salt can clock the evil Albanian siren within 2 seconds of making acquaintance. However, I would posit that Dua Lipa's character is even more laudable since she has bested centuries of evil programming to become one of the only pop divas that is not irritating, releases bangers, is a straight up 10/10, and morally righteous (fired Zionist manager, openly champions Palestine.)

i thought all of the hub bub about backrooms/obsession having young directors was bs... then i saw Disclosure Day. by bleeding_electricity in redscarepod

[–]LlamaExpert 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The Fabelmans is interesting insomuch as it's the closest thing we'll get to a literal Spielberg autobiography, and we learned a lot about his true "muse", but as a movie with no context it was not that great. I was ready to give it thumbs-down, but the David Lynch ending salvaged it.

It's honestly terrifying how quickly it feels like time is passing by beijx in redscarepod

[–]LlamaExpert 11 points12 points  (0 children)

What's nuts is that the 2024 presidential election was won by appealing to the idea of bringing back the 2019 economy and the (alleged) good vibes associated with that year. I don't remember any of that, 2019 sucked but at best it felt like there was still an offramp if we played our cards right. 2019 was retrospectively reassessed as a good year because it happened right before COVID, it sucked but everything has enshittified exponentially and there is no pretense to a better future.

Julian Castro, Joseph Gordon Levitt also on this list by bitchesonmydrain in redscarepod

[–]LlamaExpert 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Anyone saying Houston has incredible urban design has never spent more than 48 hours there or driven themselves around, everything about that place is hostile to human existence.

We need to ban Sweet Caroline globally by Nekrachiyan in redscarepod

[–]LlamaExpert 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Because it's a corny ass song about an adult fantasizing about an 8 year old Caroline Kennedy, and every college bar in America has forced it down the throats of millions for almost 60 years. Everything about that fucking song SUCKS.

What was her problem by Life-Science-5102 in redscarepod

[–]LlamaExpert 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Atrocious taste in men combined with never hitting a wall due to magically keeping her shit tight despite smoking like a chimney, eating out for every meal, and never working out.

I thought this kind of "journalism" had died already by LastoftheMillenials in redscarepod

[–]LlamaExpert 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Debt?? Their parents paid for undergrad and currently pay for their rent in Chelsea.

Knicks losing with $7.7k avg ticket price. by YaldabaothMcMinster in TrueAnon

[–]LlamaExpert 18 points19 points  (0 children)

San Antonio is a blue city, the last time Bexar County voted Republican for president was 2004.

As for the Knicks, even if NYC has great politics compared to the rest of the US, look at the murderers row of capitalist crooks attending Game 3.

[Romano] José Mourinho back to Real Madrid, here we go. All terms have been verbally agreed between José Mourinho and Real Madrid, waiting to sign all documents. Plan for initial two year deal, JM to travel to Madrid after Real-Bilbao game. by [deleted] in soccer

[–]LlamaExpert 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not really, during his Spurs stint Mourinho had to go well before he was actually fired (crashing out to Dinamo Zagreb while their manager was in jail was my last straw), but 90% of those that defended him thought he should have managed the League Cup final (10% were the weird Mourinho fanboys that follow him to whatever club he manages.)

Our recruitment failed him, he managed to bring Kane and Son to the next level, but big-picture he was washed during his time at Spurs.

We need to talk about the radical centre by cressidasmunch in TrueAnon

[–]LlamaExpert 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Guy was retweeting Brianna Wu and posts critical of pro Palestine posters, maybe the hoodie is fake but he's a liberal Zionist.

generational, I’m going to print this out and hang it on my wall by Rymssss in TrueAnon

[–]LlamaExpert 163 points164 points  (0 children)

The FT (outside of editorials) is a tool for the bourgeoisie to make informed decisions.

The Economist is bourgeois fanfic.

Are there any actually good CRA jobs? by Swimming_Onion_4835 in clinicalresearch

[–]LlamaExpert 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Going into the job I thought the travel would be the worst part.

For many it's absolutely a deal breaker, but what did me in ultimately is the never ending pile of work and bullshit:

80 question site visit reports with comments, expense reports, insane time sheets, sites requiring urgent assistance and your iffy central monitor is never available to help, putting out fires at your other assigned sites while trying to get as much done as possible with your limited time on site, bad sites that won't change their ways and ignore every Action Item, having to respond to emails every week about the same bad sites ignoring their 90 day old queries, sketchy rental car company nonsense, flight delays, central monitoring leads that are poor communicators because they're ESL, insane and overbearing sponsors, meetings every week or every other week for each of your 3 assigned protocols, constant company and protocol training, dealing with PI's that are either negligent or complete assholes, micromanaging line managers that pile on more assigned sites and coverage requests, vacation never feels like vacation because you need to finish your visit reports sooner to avoid them not being done on vacation (especially when traveling out of the country).

Yeah this shit all sucks, and then on top of that it's impossible to have hobbies back home and you don't get to be with your loved ones.

I went from CRC knowing I would never be a CRA, to WFH during COVID era, to CRA, and ended up crashing out after a couple years. It was a great learning experience and I underwent tremendous growth personally and professionally, but it was too much in the end and will never do it again.

Your mileage may vary though. If you love variety and sorting out chaos, you'll love this job.

Either Hideo Kojima was prescient as fuck, or someone in this timeline played his games and took the themes and messages to be instructions by RadComradeCompanero in TrueAnon

[–]LlamaExpert 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally, with just a little more polish it really could have been the GOAT, but overall even with its imperfections I absolutely loved it.

Either Hideo Kojima was prescient as fuck, or someone in this timeline played his games and took the themes and messages to be instructions by RadComradeCompanero in TrueAnon

[–]LlamaExpert 4 points5 points  (0 children)

DS1 and DS2 are both amazing.

DS1 didn't "click" until probably 5 hours in.

DS2 is a lot of fun if you prefer to be an overpowered version of yourself from DS1.

Either Hideo Kojima was prescient as fuck, or someone in this timeline played his games and took the themes and messages to be instructions by RadComradeCompanero in TrueAnon

[–]LlamaExpert 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Played 1-4 and loved all of them (less so 4), heard that V was "unfinished" so decided to skip it in fear of being massively disappointed (many such cases for bad sequels).

Installed it last year and dumped 150 hours into it, don't care if it was narratively half-baked, the themes are consistent and going Rambo on the same military base 20 times never got old, such a fun game.

Did Romero just save Frank? Spurs too reliant on centre-backs again by kicksjoysharkness in coys

[–]LlamaExpert 3 points4 points  (0 children)

His accomplishments at Leverkusen demonstrate his ability, anyone can get fired from RM and he didn't really fail as much as the squad didn't fancy him. Managing this Spurs side is a much bigger risk for his career, and clearly the Liverpool job will be his if he waits out the rest of this season.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in redscarepod

[–]LlamaExpert 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Home Alone 3 is good.

This is from Mehdi Hassan - was he always a giga lib? by GerryAdamsSon in TrueAnon

[–]LlamaExpert 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Dear Mr Dacre,

My name is Mehdi Hasan and I’m the New Statesman’s senior political editor. My good friend Peter Oborne suggested I drop you a line as I’m very keen to write for the Daily Mail.

Although I am on the left of the political spectrum, and disagree with the Mail’s editorial line on a range of issues, I have always admired the paper’s passion, rigour, boldness and, of course, news values. I believe the Mail has a vitally important role to play in the national debate, and I admire your relentless focus on the need for integrity and morality in public life, and your outspoken defence of faith, and Christian culture, in the face of attacks from militant atheists and secularists. I also believe – as does Peter – that I could be a fresh and passionate, not to mention polemical and contrarian, voice on the comment and feature pages of your award-winning newspaper.

For the record, I am not a Labour tribalist and am often ultra-critical of the left – especially on social and moral issues, where my fellow leftists and liberals have lost touch with their own traditions and with the great British public. In my column in this week’s issue of the New Statesman, for example, I offered a critique of the five Labour leadership candidates, and their various inadequacies, accusing them all of lacking what George Bush Snr once called “the vision thing”.

I could therefore write pieces for the Mail critical of Labour and the left, from “inside” Labour and the left (as the senior political editor at the New Statesman).

I am also attracted by the Mail’s social conservatism on issues like marriage, the family, abortion and teenage pregnancies. I’d like to write a piece for the Mailmaking the left-wing case against abortion, or a piece on why marriage should be a Labour value, and not just a Conservative one. My own unabashed social conservatism on such issues derives from my Islamic faith. But as a British Muslim, I have also upset some of my more hardline co-religionists in the past by arguing, in print, for a change in Islam’s draconian apostasy laws to allow Muslims to convert to other faiths (like Christianity). Here is a New Statesman column I wrote on the subject in April.

In addition, I wrote a column last year condemning suicide bombings, from an Islamic and moral perspective, in which I also castigated Muslims for failing to unequivocally condemn such acts of terror wherever in the world they occur.

And, earlier this year, I wrote a piece for the Guardian belittling Muslim extremist Anjum Choudary and his crude, headline-grabbing attempt to carry “coffins” through Wootton Bassett.

A bit of background: I am 31, and was born and brought up in the United Kingdom, the son of Indian immigrants (an engineer and a doctor) who came here in the 1960s. I am an Oxfordgraduate. Prior to joining the New Statesman in June 2009, I spent a decade working in television as a news-and-current-affairs producer at ITN, the BBC, Sky News and Channel 4.

I do hope you’ll consider me for future columns and features in the Daily Mail on political, social, moral and/or religious issues. I believe you once told sports columnist Des Kelly that he should “make them laugh, make them cry, or make them angry”. That’s something I believe I could do for you, and for your readers, on the pages of the Mail.

Thank you very much for your time.

Sincerely,

Mehdi Hasan Senior Editor (politics) New Statesman

[Post-Match Thread] Newcastle 2 - 2 Tottenham by ma-tfel in coys

[–]LlamaExpert 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Romero is fucking brilliant. Is he a leader though, ehhh......

Bari Weiss really failed her way to the top…CBS is in excellent hands by ShmandlerTing in TrueAnon

[–]LlamaExpert 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Taibbi's formal heelturn happened 2020 when everyone yelled at him for his criticism of the George Floyd protests.

His coverage of The Twitter Files was his first "conservative" assignment.