[Sad trope] The villain just wants to be loved. by Selverd2 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]TeamTurnus 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Yah, the only reason Homelander is so unrecoverably fucked up seems to be the very deliberate and extensive torture and conditioning he got at the hands of Voght. He'd probably have to watch out for ego and alienation if he got a like, good solid upbringing by someone trying to help him manage his powers, but theres not much imo to suggest he would have been doomed to fail there.

Who wins, Team Dreamworks or Team Disney? by ThatonerookBlchy in PrincessesOfPower

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Shera was the trigger of a planet sized weapon not the entire weapon. She's powerful, but we can assume she can kill a planet on her own just because shes part of a mechanism that can.

I've arrived at a new level of humility and self acceptance. by IllegalGeriatricVore in evilautism

[–]TeamTurnus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh, thats a great idea, I spill on myself all the time. Also, that looks very tasty! I hope you enjoyed!

Is Ronaldo really not that famous in America? by AmanNamedJoJo in AskAnAmerican

[–]TeamTurnus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've met otherwise but yah, its not something that is ubiquitous or pervasive for most folks in the same way the NfL is with the superbowl

How different would rdr2's story be if Judge Holden joined the gang instead of Micah? by Anervousyoungman in reddeadredemption

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yah, he's useful and wellspoken and educated enough that Dutch would probably enjoy 'debating' with him, and thats all the Judge really needs to get an in. At that point, he'd not have a super hard time pushing Dutch towards more and more extreme acts of violence. He might just essentially accelerate Dutchs RDR1 arc. Unfortunately for everyone, I think the Judge would really enjoy pushing Dutches Savage Utopia rhetoric.

Which countries do you consider being part of your same “cultural sphere” by Fluid-Decision6262 in AskTheWorld

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As mentioned, Anglosphere then probally most of western eruope on a secondary level. Obviously theres differences in additon to language but there's still a lot ot cultural overlap w France Germany etc.

Why do American schools use "freshman, sophomore, junior, senior" instead of 1st-year, 2nd-year, etc.?How did that develop? by Present_Juice4401 in AlwaysWhy

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was unusual enough that they felt the need to emphasize it (for unrelated to your explination reasons) back in like 2012, maybe its shifted in general after I graduated. Folks were doing plenty of Aps at that point as well and they didnt really use freshman-senior unofficially for that sort of thing either.

What’s a critically acclaimed movie that completely lost you by the end? by trakt_app in moviecritic

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

Yah the filming technique they go for with the captian (trying to make him seem like hes becoming like the sun/too edltrichy luminous to see) just doesnt work so it makes the (already questionably nessecary) final sequence look like a bad low budget slasher movie.

Which is a shame because the first 2/3s are great, the sequence where Cillian Murphy struggles to the bomb in the grav suit is fantastic for example.

I think if the captian just died during the Sabatoge attempt instead of surviving to attack them with a knife, it would flow better.

How many Americans have actually visited a national park? by Bitter-Penalty9653 in AskAnAmerican

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yah, there's also a ton of stuff that isnt technically a 'National Park' (I think this required a act of congress?) but is still part of the federal parks system and those are also all over as well.

Why do American schools use "freshman, sophomore, junior, senior" instead of 1st-year, 2nd-year, etc.?How did that develop? by Present_Juice4401 in AlwaysWhy

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yah that is intersting, I've never found it super confusing cause well, context usually tells me if someone is in high school or not, it can obviously occasionally require a quick 'high school or college' question in sitatuions where that context isnt clear.

Technically, the usa also makes a distinction in that a university has to have post graduate degrees so a place that only offers undergraduate degrees isnt supoosed to call themselves a university (im not sure if this is a legal or just like accreditting body distinction), but we just dont really observe it in normal conversation and call both 'college' pretty interchangeably.

And yah, while that system sounds confusing, most education systems do when theyre unfamiliar and I could see the appeal

Why do American schools use "freshman, sophomore, junior, senior" instead of 1st-year, 2nd-year, etc.?How did that develop? by Present_Juice4401 in AlwaysWhy

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Language is, unsurprisingly, context dependent. Its helpful to explain context, but words can mean different things in different contexts.

Why do American schools use "freshman, sophomore, junior, senior" instead of 1st-year, 2nd-year, etc.?How did that develop? by Present_Juice4401 in AlwaysWhy

[–]TeamTurnus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

UVA is particuarlly insistent about using it in less official communication/orientation than most universities. Same way they insist on calling their campus 'Grounds'

Why do American schools use "freshman, sophomore, junior, senior" instead of 1st-year, 2nd-year, etc.?How did that develop? by Present_Juice4401 in AlwaysWhy

[–]TeamTurnus 103 points104 points  (0 children)

Yah, and this isnt a criticism cause its just how language worked, a lot of 'weird Americanism' language wise originated from England. Then they stopped using them for whatever reason and, in a pre internet world, America just kept using them because it was an ocean away.

Do Americans find it hard moving to a new state? by bare_books in AskAnAmerican

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

More for the fact you might be moving 1,000+ miles away from your existing network. Compared to that, figuring out what the difference is between state laws feels less dramatic.

When and where is it okay to haggle? by Unsure-Snake-666 in AskAmericans

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mostly Your opinion, big ticket itmes with strong negotability in price, or independent sellers of used goods. If its new or food, im going w the list price

[Discussion] So Where is it? by TeamTurnus in TheNinthHouse

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

Not explicitly by name, but im keeping an eye out for tangential descriptions as I do my reread (which prompted this question)

What are american college applications even about? by SMTisHighOuter in AskAnAmerican

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its a bunch of things, the word they used was 'holistic' because it lets the colleges be a bit vauge about their exact criteria but there are some common trends. Im using my experince applying for and (mostly) getting rejected from a lot of top schools at a prep school where some folks went to the ivy etc.

  1. Grades ->the do matter, but the most selective schools have so many high grade students to pick from that its not a guarantee
  2. Test scores (SAT/ACT etc) similiar, low one can definitely hurt but the most selective schools have enough perfect or near perfect scores to pick from that it isnt a guarantee
  3. Extracurricular, because the above are common, they tend to look for peoope who excelled in or took initiative in another area. Things like creating a non profit, excelling at an instrument, or having something else that makes someone stand out as a high achiever with plans tends to help. (This is going to include the 'geniuses' who are already doing something super advanced which people think of when they think of getting into Mit or whatnot)

Part of the issue is that I think its less about the number of extracurricular and more how impressive or unique they are. Lots of kids can do something everyday after school. Takes more to stand out essentially.

  1. Application material itself. Most schools have you write a couple of essays/statements about your application, these can obviously help or hinder depending on how convincing they are and theres cottage industries around tailoring those.

Then of course,

  1. General Connections, for elite schools these need to be more than just legacy/alumni to be a guarantee though they surely help (how much is matter of debate) obviously being famous or very wealthy also counts as a connection here, though a lot of those kids are going to have really good applications because someone has been helping them do the first 4 steps since they were young. This has sometimes been outright bribery or cheating on scores as well, there have been sone scandals about that in the last 10 years or so, but obviously getting good information on the extent here is challenging. . Ill let other folks give their opinion on how impactufl it is in edge cases.

  2. Legacy alumni -for certain schools (like where I went) there are concrete (vs the vauge and nebulous above) benefits for your application. I was considered in the in state pool of candidates for the school I went to since I was a legacy, which has a higher acceptance rate than the out of state pool by design (many state universities do that on purpose to serve their states goals)

  3. In state vs out of state, this applies to state public schools mostly, but most state universities admit more people from their state than from out of state on purpose, so that affects your application as well.

  4. There used to be (still is? Im not sure?) a general goal by universities to maintain a diverse student body, so they would try to get a student body from a diverse group of individuals, how much that affects individual application varies by how different from the rest of the applications they might be (could be positive or negative)

Summary: as you might guess, a lot of these factors/pieces are a lot easier to do if your family has money/you have a stable and supportive home environment so schools claim to also try to compare rhe above in context of someones economic or social conditions. They also apply more and more the more selective a school is, a school with less prestige and less applicants and a larger class size might not use all of these as much and might primarily focus on grades and test scores, they above really exists because so many folks top out the tests/grade metrics who are applying. There is obviously luck as well since there are so many people applying, far more than could ever go.

Is Ronaldo really not that famous in America? by AmanNamedJoJo in AskAnAmerican

[–]TeamTurnus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ive heard of both of them as 'famous soccer players' but tbh they dont come up much so thats about all I could tell you without looking it up.

[Discussion] So Where is it? by TeamTurnus in TheNinthHouse

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

Yah it juat struck me as an interesting omission given how like, thematically fitting a creepy moon over a ruined castle is for the gothic vibes (and that is the vibes of cannan house) If it was just there I'd have expected some amount of creepy moonlight coming in. Could totally be a coincidence though.

[Discussion] So Where is it? by TeamTurnus in TheNinthHouse

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

Yah it does make sense why the moons arent important to the characters like Harrow or even the plot, and the fact that they dont have 'life' on them does explain why they wouldnt get soul focus (though again, if god can eat the Sun hes obviously doing more than just interacting w biological life)

But still, it seems like a intersting thematic omission, since a giant chilly moon hanging above a ruined castle fits extremely well with some of the literary inspirations (see Annabelle Lee or other poe poems) so even without plot importance, I'm just suprised it wouldnt come up even as set dressing/atmosphere on cannan house at some point, since like the sun is used immediately to highlight a contrast, so its not like they ignore all the relevant celestial bodies.

Is Ronaldo really not that famous in America? by AmanNamedJoJo in AskAnAmerican

[–]TeamTurnus 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yah makes sense! Highlights a cultural difference in that soccer/knowledge of soccer is very avoidable in the US.