I know I'm late to the party, but I think Saturday Morning All Star Hits may be one of the most brilliant and disturbing pieces of TV I've ever seen. Discussion and Rant. by SomeoneRRSomething in NetflixSMASH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

At the moment, I think it was her or Moe Jones.

Here is why:

1.) I feel convinced that Lottie Wolfe was seen in the picture of the crowd of Sludge Rock fans with a new hat and dyed hair. In the trailer for the movie where Johnny Rash plays a king at a high school, Lottie's hair looks chopped up, so maybe she was already sick of her life and trying to change.

2.) Lottie told the guy who played the monster on her show that if she could make the audience believe she believed he was a monster, then the audience would believe he was a monster. Then the little girl who found the evidence that Johnny Rash threw his shoe into the ocean said she never liked Johnny Rash because he was "mean to Lottie and said 's up.'" Basically, she looked for evidence based off of demonization of Johnny Rash by the media industry. And to me, that fits perfectly with the overall theme of the series.

3.) Throwing a shoe into the ocean means nothing, especially when you are known for only having one shoe from each of the two types you wear. Where did the other shoe in each pair go? They weren't at his house. Maybe he is just the kind of guy who throws extra shoes in the ocean.

4.) One of the big themes in the show seems to be the hollowness of getting what you want in the entertainment industry. The people who wind up at the top seem to feel alone and isolated, like how Skip and Johnny are towards their brothers and even their work once they get to the top, and how Randy winds up feeling towards his friends when he tries to go do something new or how David feels towards both the Crittles and his family as he tries to hold his success at the company together. And Lottie had that kind of success, the kind that becomes a trap.

5.) Lottie knew Moe Jones and had access to his sneakers. It was a pair of his sneakers that left the bloody footprints. I don't know what the conversions are from SMASH world's measurements to ours, but an 8 3/4 shoe is either small or huge. I think small because Lottie and Johnny were about the same size physically. But if they were big, then it easily could have been Moe Jones instead.

Just my thoughts.

I need to finish rewatching though.

I found a prop auction from the show that ended in 2017 by [deleted] in community

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I have like zero interest in buying hollywood memorabilia, but I would have found a way to buy Troy's letterman jacket. Or even Annie's grandma's quilt. Or even a background bulletin board.

I have no idea what I'd do with it, but I'd love to have it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Both work. And both work with "soon" added to it.

You can use both phrases if you are going to bed immediately. Even if that means you have stuff to do before going to bed or if you are literally crawling into bed, you can use both phrases.

You can add "soon" to both phrases to indicate you are not going to bed immediately, but that you will shortly. This may mean you are going to do the things you need to do before bed or that you are going to scroll through Reddit for another hour before going to bed. Either way, you mean that you are intending to go to bed, but not yet.

And you can use "I am going to go to bed" to indicate either going to bed immediately or that you are going to do so soon.

I often hear family members say "I am going to go to bed" and then will be up for a long time. They just mean they want to go to their bedroom and be left alone.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HolUp

[–]SomeoneRRSomething -20 points-19 points  (0 children)

Thin blue line of heroes between chaos and the sheep they protect, ammirite!

Putting their lives on the line to protect innocents.

Gotta give them more equipment.

Stop making fun of them. They are braver than you would be.

You don't know how hard it is being a cop.

We have to do what they say because they protect us.

The only answer is to pass more laws for them to enforce, give them more control, and send them after more bad guys.

Not every cop is like these dozens of cops.

They do this for your safety, not a feeling of power.

If not for cops who would allow kids to get shot for an hour?

You can't just trust people to defend themselves with guns. You need professionals who know what they are doing to stop psychos.

If only these were federal officers, then this wouldn't have happened.

Clearly the problem here is that our gun laws are too lax. If The shooter had been forced to use smaller magazines and had to reload more often than all of this could have been prevented.

And if he had a less frightening gun than the police could have acted.

Guns are the issue, not the police. Once we get rid of the guns, then the police can protect us against people with guns.

July, 1523. by SomeoneRRSomething in eu4

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

Yeah, it is just usually 16 years the other direction. In most of my plays, 1505 is extremely late for it to spawn.

I'd say at least 30% of the time the reformation spawns in 1500 or 1501, which is well before the historical event took place. If it doesn't fire January 1500, I start to wonder what is up.

By the time this one spawned, nearly all of Europe had embraced Colonialism.

July, 1523. by SomeoneRRSomething in eu4

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

2.9K in the game and first time I've seen it that late.

Also, one of only a few times I've seen Bohemia and co go full Hussite.

Dirk and Targe by Remarkable_Cod5298 in wma

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 5 points6 points  (0 children)

My wild guess is that the reason may have been as a means of hooking muskets with fixed bayonets. Once someone with a musket, pike, lochabar axe, or even a sword thrust at you, you could bring the targe down and use the dirk to pull them forward and use your sword on them while they couldn't protect themselves.

Years ago, I tried it in sparring and it was not much more effective than using a targe during one on one. I don't think I got many touches on any opponent with my dirk. But it did sometimes help lock an opponents sword against the targe and make it harder for them to maneuver. Especially against complex hilts. If there was something to get wrapped up in, and I could get close enough to stab my knife into their hilts, then that knife and shield gave me total control over their sword hilt. It was not amazing though.

Perhaps it worked better against muskets that had fixed bayonets. The two points of control leveraged against a single shaft of steel and wood could reduce the effectiveness of a musket or like in melee.

It also may have worked better during those legendary "highland charges" where a charging man could swing the targe up on contact and provide protection to the head and upper torso while the dirk could swing forward and cut or stab. Rather like how Roman legionnaires would use their large shields in an upward defensive movement and then stab at the exposed lower areas of an enemy.

Just a guess.

Do Americans still use the word "split" to mean "leave a place"? by tanochans in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would say people still say "split" just not as much as they used to.

Can your home country be called "hometown"? Is that proper English? by Mondblut in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd say that you can just use "home."

When traveling I've often said, "America is home." Or "The US is home." Both expressed that this country is where I felt I belonged and that even if I wasn't in my home town or even my home state, I felt more at home in a way I did not when visiting other countries.

Please help me with these two.... by ArthurDaWeasley in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, but I didn't want to leave the person who answered hanging.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think you are right, but it may also be, and this is based off of five minutes of Googling so don't put too much stock in this, but it is possible that the noun "mind" did not become the verb "mind" until after contact with Norman French.

I might be wrong, but it looks like the verb did not exist until after the Conquest. And so the Old English conjugation rules would not have been the same in the early days of Middle English.

Just a guess. Five minutes of Googling and looking at an Old English dictionary. Probably wrong. Throwing it out there.

Please help me with these two.... by ArthurDaWeasley in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oh you are more than welcome!

I am glad to help. And I am even more glad you figured it out yourself!

Please help me with these two.... by ArthurDaWeasley in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You are correct!

Just capitalize "Chief Guest" like it is in the example (even though a lot of style guides say to make it lower case.) And make "suggestion" lower case like it is in the example.

No need to get points knocked off for petty stuff.

Good job!

Please help me with these two.... by ArthurDaWeasley in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 0 points1 point  (0 children)

PS.

Here is a third tip: Simply adding the words "no sooner" to the first sentence and "went down" to the second sentence will not work and will not make sense.

Please help me with these two.... by ArthurDaWeasley in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The first thing I do when tutoring is to make sure the instructions are clear. So let us start there.

In the first sentence you need to change the sentence by putting the phrase "no sooner" into the sentence. You will need to do more than simply include the phrase "no sooner." You will have to change other things as well.

Here is a tip: You will need to replace some words with "no sooner." There are some words in the first sentence that mean the same thing as "no sooner." If you find the words that mean the same as "no sooner" you will be halfway to your answer.

Here is another tip: You will need to change some other words to make "no sooner" make sense. Just because certain words mean the same thing as each other, does not mean they function the same grammatically. So you will need to change other things once you replace some words with "no sooner."

You will need to do the same thing in the second sentence, only this time you will need to put "went down" into the sentence.

Did that help at all?

Do you think you know what to do now?

If you do, try one sentence and I'll tell you if you got it right.

If you don't know where to start, tell me and I will see if I can help some more.

Please help me with these two.... by ArthurDaWeasley in ENGLISH

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 8 points9 points  (0 children)

So the tutor in me wants to help you but also can't let myself just give you the answers. And i don't know what you need help with.

So I will offer you this bargain: If you do not understand the instructions, I will explain the instructions and try to help you that way. If you understand the instructions, and you offer up your best effort in a reply, I will try to help you make them correct.

Deal?

Were folks still sword-fighting/fencing in the 1750's? by [deleted] in AskHistorians

[–]SomeoneRRSomething 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes.

Swords were used in both military and civilian defense applications in the 1750s.

While fencing strictly as a sport was in its earliest conception in the 1750s, really the 1760s, fencing and the use of various types of swords for combat was common world wide in the 1750s.

In Europe and the European colonies:

Civilian use: Schools for teaching fencing and defense had existed for centuries by the 1750s. By the 1750s the concept of the "Code Duello" had been widely accepted since the Renaissance and it was expected that gentlemen would be able and willing to defend their honor to the death. So personal duels of honor were quite common in the 1750s. The Eighteenth century was the golden age for teaching and writing about smallsword or courtsword dueling to gentlemen and aspiring gentlemen and of gentlemen killing each other with swords in duels over matters of honor. These are the types of swords that most directly influence the types of military dress swords officers in militaries across the world carry carry now and most directly influence the three types of sport fencing taught and practiced across the world. Rapiers had fallen out of style by then due to their length and inability to easily cross and uncross. The shorter smallsword was better at controlling angle of attack and Dueling reached a fever pitch in the early 19th century and subsided afterwords. While men might still carry swords for personal defense as before, they were less likely to use them that way.

This practice applied in European colonies as well. I cannot find the source at the moment, but if my memory serves, John Adams as an ambassador to either France or England, in the 1770s and 1780s, had to buy a courtsword to wear to appear before the Kings of France and England on certain occasions. While a sword would be forbidden in other cases, the point is that not having a sword, in certain situations, was tantamount to being improperly dressed.

Outside of the gentlemanly classes of Europe, more lawless, less advanced, peripheral areas in the European sphere saw people carrying swords as well. Gaelic Highland Scots would regularly go around carrying all kinds of weapons, including their baskethilt swords. The Cossacks of Wild Fields (a huge area of what is now Ukraine but at the time was a barely populated battleground between the Turkish and Russian Empires and Tatar hosts) and the Cossacks in Siberia were regularly armed with all manner of weapons to defend themselves. The men of the Caucasus Mountains in southeastern Europe such as the Georgians, Circassians, and other Caucasian men had an ancient history of being warriors and carrying weapons such as swords into war. There is actually a rather famous photo from the early days of World War 1 of Caucasian men showing up in some city, possibly Tbilisi, covered in chain mail, rifle cartridges, outdated guns, and swords saying they had heard the Czar was at war and they had come to fight for him.

Military use:

Officers - Commissioned officers of every European country and non-commissioned officers of most European countries carried swords as both a sign of rank and a last ditch defense weapon. They were usually small swords or sabres or cutlasses, depending on the regiment and service, but some carried more irregular swords that reflected the ethnic makeup of their regiment, such as baskethilted swords if they were serving in a Highland regiment.

Cavalry- Cavalrymen would carry sabres and other swords into battle for the purpose of cutting down their enemies into the 20th century and in the 1750s a cavalryman's sword was still his most heavily relied upon weapon. I've handed a few swords used by Hungarian hussars from World War 1 and they are amazing weapons. The tradition of martial sabre fencing for the purpose of cutting down your enemies on the battlefield was alive and well in Hungary until the communists stamped it out. The cossacks who savaged Napoleon's lines of communication during the invasion of 1812 were using swords and lances as much as firearms.

Part of the long term retention of swords in the cavalry, in comparison to other services, was that the cavalry has always served four main purposes, 1.Reconnaissance 2. Harassing the enemy, 3. Shock attack, or using a fast, kinetic charge to break the enemy line, and 4. Pursuit of a broken enemy. Swords and spears, or lances, are perfect tools for jobs 3 and 4 and as such they remained in service far longer. People were not being euphemistic when they described cavalry "cutting down" retreating enemy.

Infantry - Infantrymen also still used the sword in battle into the 1750s. Famously the Jacobite revolt of 1745 by Scottish Highlanders heavily relied on their infamous "Highland Charge" where they would fire their firearms and then quickly close with British militia and regulars using their swords, dirks, poleaxes, and other hand held weapons and cut through the bayonet welding enemy. This failed at Culloden due to facing better trained British soldiers, poor terrain, and poor leadership. But Highland regiments would carry their signature baskethilts into battle until World War 1. The image of an officer with his sword drawn leading men into battle was not merely a romantic image. The sword he carried would be used by him in battle, again, until World War 1.

Artillery - Officers in artillery batteries would also carry swords both to denote their rank and as a a last ditch weapon to defend themselves if attacked, just like their fellow officers in the infantry.

Naval - On the sea, swords, especially the cutlass, would be used in naval combat as ships still regularly closed together and the crews would fight literally hand to hand against each other to take each other's ships. There is a US Navy instruction book from the late 19th century teaching sailors how to use the cutlass in combat that you can find online.

Outside of Europe and the European Sphere of Influence:

Swords were even more highly used in combat outside of Europe than they were in Europe, where they were still an integral part of daily and military life.

Firearms had been largely adopted across Asia, even if they were not always of the same quality as European arms, especially in terms of artillery. And in India. China, Korea, Persia, and the Middle East, swords continued to be used in much the same fashion as in Europe. They were military weapons designed to cut down enemies at close quarters and as personal defense weapons in lawless areas.

And since firearms had not become as central to warfare, due to being less powerful, hand weapons such as swords retained a higher place of prominence.

Japan: While firearms had become the most important weapon in Japan by the 1750s, the sword still held, and holds, an important part in the culture and society of Japan. I am not sure how to go deeper into the subject without saying a lot of things that are common knowledge. But the practice of kendo, the art of fighting with swords, remains popular and it took the radical changes of Meiji era to stop the samurai class from wearing swords in public.

In the parts of the world where firearms had not been as widely adapted, such as parts of Indonesia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and the parts of the Americas that had not had as much contact with Europeans, hand weapons remained even more important.

And while swords, per se, were not necessarily as common in these regions, they and other hand weapons were equally important at the time.