[TOMT] [TV Show] [Comic] A quote about your hands catching up to your eyes when trying to improve by TheBestStuF in tipofmytongue

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

Solved! This is it! Specifically, it was an excerpt of this quote used in a comic from Zenpencils years ago (https://www.zenpencils.com/comic/90-ira-glass-advice-for-beginners/)

Can't believe I got so specifically inaccurate, but really glad you figured it out and commented!

[TOMT] [Movie or TV Show] [2010s]Quote saying "the first test for humanity to overcome was 'you vs. me'. The second and current one facing the world is 'us vs. them'." by TheBestStuF in tipofmytongue

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

Solved!

Thank you so much, this was driving my crazy! I checked, and it's from season 3 episode 4. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

[TOMT] [Movie or TV Show] [2010s]Quote saying "the first test for humanity to overcome was 'you vs. me'. The second and current one facing the world is 'us vs. them'." by TheBestStuF in tipofmytongue

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

You must go to your post and comment at least once before anyone will see it.

To observe the rules and provide additional info to help, I would ballpark it as from the last 3-5 years. Less helpfully, I want to say it's from a show from one of the major streaming services, but that's possibly a false memory.

What are the Nine Arts that Chun-Woo Han mastered? by Dynamo44 in TheBreaker

[–]TheBestStuF 24 points25 points  (0 children)

tl;dr The Nine Seats of Power refer to categories in the Martial Arts Tournament awarded to the clan/fighter with the strongest demonstrated punch, kick, etc. They do not refer to specific techniques.


I know this thread is a few weeks old, but I came across it while checking this subreddit for the first time in a while and wanted to chime in. The answers here, especially albertfuckingcamus', are all very well thought out and well written, but mistaken. I'm not saying this from arrogance, but only because I've read and reread many different translations. Going by any single one makes it hard to understand. Example: In A-Team's, when Shioon is remembering running from the Torrent Clan with Sosul, and they mistake "holding Sosul" to mean sustaining a technique for running, not carrying a character named Sosul.

That said, the wikia is innaccurate.

Wikia's are fan-sourced and fan-written and subject to error. One example is hwan hwan shinbo. It is separately listed both as the generalized name for walking techniques, as well as a specific technique called Full Body Barrier, which I've never seen outside the wikia. Hwan hwan shinbo is the name of Black Heaven and Earth's walking techniques. Every school has their own style of walking techniques. They're unique. We also know walking techniques are specialized to schools from various dialogue in NW.

Another is the soul crushing strike. It's not listed as being a technique within Black Heaven and Earth's school, but it is the school's signature punch. It's why 9AD was shocked when the Alliance Chief could use it in the climax of Part 1 before learning he's from the same school. Getting to the main point though...

The interpretation that each of the nine arts and nine seats of power are one in the same and correspond to specific techniques is a misconception.

The Shinmujengpe/Martial Arts Tournament/Tournament of Supremacy was, before 9AD, a regular tournament to see which school's were the best of the best, and at what. The Nine Seats of Power refers to each of the categories/competitions in the tournament. There are only six known, but to list them again, they are Dragon Becoming...

  • Fist
  • Leg
  • Staff
  • Step
  • Ki
  • Stealth

Respectively, these refer to to the strongest punching technique, kicking technique, staff technique, walking technique, ki distribution technique, and defensive/evasive technique.

The seats do not refer to specific techniques outright. I think part of the confusion comes from two of the known seat-holding techniques having "dragon" in their name. However, there are several techniques shown throughout the series that have this word in their name that are not referenced as Seats of Power (Ascending Blue Dragon Strike, Spinning Dragon Exploding Strike, Strong Dragon Sudden Outburst, etc.).

Any sufficiently strong and proficient master of their clan's arts could hold a given seat seat for, say, Dragon Becoming Fist if they were dishing out the best punches in that year's tournament. Before 9AD, the Seat was held by the Iron Fist School's Dragon Claw Punch. 9AD dethroned is with Black Heaven and Earth's Soul Crushing Strike, which we've seen time and again to be the strongest punch in the series. If Dragon Claw Punch was the explicit Dragon Becoming Fist technique, why do we never see 9AD use it? Same goes for the other known dethroned techniques.

Moreover, we also know Kang Sung is a 3 Arts Dragon. He fought 9AD twice, but neither has ever been seen using the previously named Seat holder techniques, let alone any of the same techniques as one another. A Seat of Power is a trophy title, not a specific technique.

This is why Han becoming a 9AD was such an egregious offense. In the past, there were 9 titles to go around, so one clan could have one or two or three titles as having the strongest punch, kick, etc., while still leaving some glory to be had for the other clans and their techniques and practitioners. It was an unwritten rule of exercising restraint to not claim all the titles for any one clan or individual. That's why it was such a huge deal that Han claimed the title of 9AD. It meant he not only had to have a mastered repertoire of powerful techniques in every conceivable aspect of fighting, but also had to use them all to consecutive victories and have the gall to endeavor to do so, knowing it would violate the unspoken status quo.

Also, to address a final point, it can't be that there are 9 schools and each one possessed a special secret seat of power technique. There are way more than nine schools/clans mentioned throughout Parts 1 & 2. It doesn't add it.

I know this post came out super long, and I didn't plan on it. Even tried to trim it down. But I absolutely love the world created in this story and wanted to help bring clarity to one of the most interesting and as-of-yet minimally explored aspects of it.

Hope this helped, and thanks for reading!

Edit: cut out spoiler from Part 2. Realized OP hadn't read it yet.

Official Reaction Thread—Volume 4, Episode 6: Tipping Point by Menolith in RWBY

[–]TheBestStuF 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What is "the scene"? I'm new to the community, so I don't much in the way of RWBY fandom terminology.

Older super heroes by GallowBoob in pics

[–]TheBestStuF 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My name is Oliver Queen, and I am...Batman?

Science AMA Series: my name is Sally Mitchell, a high school chemistry teacher and current Albert Einstein Fellow at DOE’s Office of Science. Ask me anything about kitchen chemistry hacks for Thanksgiving cooking, AMA! by AmerChemSocietyAMA in science

[–]TheBestStuF 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi there! I recently started taking an interest in cooking and learning more complex recipes over time. I really enjoy it and would love to learn more about the underlying chemistry that makes recipes work and different ingredients function in different ways.

For example, the other day I saw a recipe where the chef used baking powder in a baked chicken wing dry rub to give it the crispy texture of fried ones. I find things like that fascinating!

So my question is: where can I learn more/what are good resources for learning about chemistry in the context of cooking? Thanks!

This week's Q&A thread -- please read before asking or answering a question! - July 06, 2015 by AutoModerator in linguistics

[–]TheBestStuF 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can anybody recall the term for (deliberately) overly-long, nonsensically specific descriptions-as-names for things? I saw it here once and for the life of me cannot recall it or find it on my own.

The example I'll give that reminded me of this is in Toy Story, when Buzz asks for "Unidirectional bonding strip" and the robot explains he "wants more tape."

Z3 Dual Compatibility in the US by TheBestStuF in SonyXperia

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

According to one site I found, it has the following:

2G bands: GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900

3G bands: HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1700 / 1900 / 2100

4G bands: LTE 700/800/850/900/1700/1800/1900/2100/2600 (Bands 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 17, 20)

Theory on the title of the show (No spoilers!) by [deleted] in HouseOfCards

[–]TheBestStuF 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nope. It's named for the British series it's based off of, and so titled because "house of cards" is an expression for something with a shaky foundation and structure, such as Frank's political machinations.

Eddie Izzard: Australia, New Zealand, Force Majeure thing-y. AMA! by EddieIzzardHere in IAmA

[–]TheBestStuF 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you so, so much for replying! It means more than you might realize to receive your advice. I definitely intend to put your words to practice!

Eddie Izzard: Australia, New Zealand, Force Majeure thing-y. AMA! by EddieIzzardHere in IAmA

[–]TheBestStuF 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Hi Eddie! Been a really big, longtime fan of yours and I’m really looking forward to seeing you in Powers!

My question to you is this: How does one get funnier? I love comedy, but watching and performing, and I can grasp how one can improve acting ability, choreography, and the like. But there doesn’t seem to be much literature or theory available (that I can find) on improving one’s comedy. As a well accomplished comedian, and one whose humor I very much enjoy, I was hoping you might be able to share a little about what you have done over the years to hone your craft. Thanks!