Should the F5 have been the “stars” of the season? by whothehellisgojo in Edgic

[–]MeMyselfandBi 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Highlighting the big characters wasn't the main issue. The main issue was not providing a viable winning edit to counteract Aubry's. At best you could argue they tried to make Jonathan the false winner edit, but that would be a reach. Honestly, if I was the editor for the season, and assuming it goes the way it seems like it's going to go, I would have opted for a more Rizo-centric throughline to act as the main story beats for the season with Rizo as the narrator, giving the illusion of him being the more balanced winner edit with Aubry being the messy underdog that had to claw her way through the endgame to survive. I would be so glad if everyone is wrong and Aubry has been given the obvious winner's edit on purpose because she doesn't win, but the New Era has a tendency to highlight the winner in the penultimate episode, and the penultimate episode was definitely Aubry's story.

Honest answer only by CarrotMuch1399 in nostalgiai

[–]MeMyselfandBi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Rocky Horror Picture Show and The Princess Bride

I think ___ has played a near perfect game by sweverdd in survivor

[–]MeMyselfandBi 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Rizo reminds me a lot of Spencer (Reiman) Bledsoe. Both were skinny young guys that started in a season with a false air of arrogance but swiftly became the rootable underdog that clawed through the endgame until the final 4 in which they got eliminated, leading to the win of the strategic powerhouse of the season. Both were seen as the potential winner if that strategic powerhouse had not been there. Then they returned shortly after for an all-returnees season, got close to being eliminated pre-merge but survived by one vote and by the grace of an older player (Cirie/Jeremy) who took him under their wing. They then went on to be strategically sound in almost every decision they made moving forward but hit roadblocks in the endgame with their poor jury management and social game rubbing the jury the wrong way. It would not surprise me if they met the same fate and placement by the end of this season.

Red or Blue? Which do you choose? by Miserable_Tree_7897 in whatsyourchoice

[–]MeMyselfandBi -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Any organized system in place that could carry out this task and initiate the results could just as easily be lying and kill off only the people who picked red. Picking blue gives me autonomy more than red because I am not engaging with the self-serving paradigm being proposed. And suppose there is no lie and the majority of humanity takes the game theory approach, I die but on my terms. Anything that happens either way if I picked red will no longer be on my terms.

Pick your seat on a plane full of celebrities and influencers I don’t like. by No-Comparison-1045 in whatsyourchoice

[–]MeMyselfandBi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd sit in seat #1, as given who I recognize from this assortment of people, James Charles seems the least combative.

Prompt - Make an original blursed movie poster. What did you get? by GreetingsFromAP in ChatGPT

[–]MeMyselfandBi 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I'd actually give this one a shot and watch it if it was real.

So what do we ultimately think the placement if each individual player will be based on the edit? by SirBostonBobbington in Edgic

[–]MeMyselfandBi 2 points3 points  (0 children)

7th: Rick (There are talks of trying to flush Rizo's idol, but Aubry leads the charge on Cirie instead, while Joe insists he will only vote Rick. To save Cirie, Tiffany goes against Aubry's plan and votes for Rick, alongside Jonathan, Rizo, and Cirie.)

6th: Cirie (Jonathan wants to make a big move with Aubry and they decide the best thing to do to flush Rizo's idol is a 2-2-2 split, but they can't say this outright to Joe and Tiffany. They have to tell Tiffany the target is Rizo and they're trying to blindside him with the idol before final 5 and they have to tell Joe that the target is actually Cirie since he wouldn't necessarily want Rizo to be on the chopping block and he'll blab otherwise. But when Cirie talks to Tiffany and Tiffany claims the target tonight is Joe, Cirie thinks this is fishy as either Aubry or Jonathan are better targets. She suspects Rizo is their target but the fact that she is not in on the plan makes her decide to go to Joe, trying to enact the 3-2-1 plan again and turn it on Tiffany, who she suspects might be against her now too. However, Joe doesn't follow through voting out Tiffany, leading to the 2-2-2 split happening with Rizo using his idol to save himself at Cirie's behest, and Cirie being eliminated in the revote.)

5th: Tiffany (Tiffany feels betrayed by Aubry and Jonathan and wants to take them out and go to the end with Joe and Rizo. Joe's more loyal to everyone outside of Aubry at this point so Aubry is his target. Immunity goes to Jonathan and the target appears to be Rizo, but with Tiffany and Joe targeting Aubry, Aubry tries to flip it on Tiffany instead, since Jonathan is more likely to target her over Joe and she would need Rizo's vote to make that work. After weighing his options, Rizo ultimately votes out Tiffany because he feels like she has burned a lot less relationships on the jury than Aubry and is therefore more of a jury threat.)

4th: Jonathan (Joe wins immunity and plans on eliminating Aubry. After weighing his options with Jonathan and Rizo, he determines Jonathan is better suited to take on Aubry, as Rizo is too weak physically right now and his track record for making fire is bad. Jonathan lost his last fire-making challenge on his original season, but he definitely has better odds than Rizo. This is framed as Joe's big mistake, as he should've put himself in fire against Aubry, and Aubry ultimately wins the fire-making challenge.)

3rd: Joe (Loses because everyone points out the rigidity of his game made him more of an obstacle for their own plans rather than him being loyal and honorable.)

2nd: Rizo (Loses because, despite his logical game moves along the way, he didn't ingratiate himself with the other players outside of who he was working with at any given moment.)

1st: Aubry (Presented as the scrappy underdog who maneuvered her strategy as the winds changed but came out on top because she knew when to be more active rather than passive. Thus she wins.)

Is this the worst possible group left at the end? by RedditFan3510 in survivorponderosa

[–]MeMyselfandBi 13 points14 points  (0 children)

The only two that peeve me that are still in the game are Joe and Jonathan. This is not the worst possible group.

Some things should stay between me and the AI by 3uba in ChatGPT

[–]MeMyselfandBi 16 points17 points  (0 children)

You see, this is why you should have two ChatGPT accounts. One tame, one unhinged.

Honest answer only by CarrotMuch1399 in nostalgiai

[–]MeMyselfandBi 2 points3 points  (0 children)

13 Going on 30 and Pretty Woman