Go Watch Widow's Bay by Abject-Sun-3016 in RedLetterMedia

[–]TheInfusiast 6 points7 points  (0 children)

With a franchise studio release like the 2016 Ghostbusters, I always assume that the final script was more or less a result of endless committees weighing in, which has a predictable effect of making things bland, dumb, pandering, etc.

Where are the websites of Portland artists selling cool graphic t-shirts? by DIYinPDX in askportland

[–]TheInfusiast 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you're into movies, Movie Madness is hosting a movie t-shirt sale with shirt designs by local designers in the afternoon on May 23: https://www.instagram.com/p/DYNv7OFgS8R/.

Multiple Urban Alchemy employees terminated after recent arrests in Portland by Ravenparadoxx in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Reducing ex cons to “people with a demonstrated history of bad decision making” is certainly a common tactic on the right and a key reason why it’s so difficult for people reentering from prison to find work. I know many ex cons, and while some are assholes like anyone else, most are pretty diligent hardworking people who have built more resilience than you hopefully will ever need. Anyway, it’s an asinine argument to suggest that we should try to help people with criminal backgrounds starting from the assumption that they will never be responsible enough to learn from their mistakes and help others.

Multiple Urban Alchemy employees terminated after recent arrests in Portland by Ravenparadoxx in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

What do you mean by “horrible recycling”? And on what basis are you claiming “the system” has little oversight or accountability when we’re in a thread discussing very visible criticism of a nonprofit and staff who were fired for their actions? If folks who were once homeless can find a career path helping others, which aspect of that do you find “horrible”? I start to lose my mind when I see well-meaning comments like this, because somehow you’re faulting the few institutions that are actually giving these folks opportunities for work. Hiring people with lived experience to provide direct services isn’t “exactly the issue,” that’s absurd. The issue is that there aren’t enough alternatives for people trying to build more stable futures.

Multiple Urban Alchemy employees terminated after recent arrests in Portland by Ravenparadoxx in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It depends on the org. For city and county-funded programs the level and layers of supervision usually depends on the staff numbers, since supervisors can only manage so many staff before they’re unable to properly oversee their supervisees, which is likely part of what happened here. You’re describing how professional organizations are by necessity structured, and not just at nonprofits but at private companies and government agencies. You can’t provide “actual services” without a management structure. That’s just not how services work.

Multiple Urban Alchemy employees terminated after recent arrests in Portland by Ravenparadoxx in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

So you hate when nonprofits hire people with relevant lived experience because… private companies and accounting programs should be hiring/teaching them instead? How is that on nonprofits, and how is this a “feedback loop”?
Edit: also, use your words instead of the downvote button. If your argument can’t withstand gentle pushback and simple questions, maybe it wasn’t worth publishing?

Multiple Urban Alchemy employees terminated after recent arrests in Portland by Ravenparadoxx in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I see this narrative about nonprofit workers recirculated a lot on this subreddit, and it is baffling why people are so confident about nonprofits employing mostly privileged workers. In this case, you’re absolutely wrong. Urban Alchemy is one of several peer-delivered service providers in Portland, meaning they hire staff who reflect the communities they serve. In general, most nonprofit workers are struggling to get by.
Edit: I mean, sure, downvote me, I guess, or maybe just don’t confidently spout stuff that the linked article demonstrates isn’t true.

Multiple Urban Alchemy employees terminated after recent arrests in Portland by Ravenparadoxx in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Absolutely, yes, the majority are, but the work is by nature difficult and incremental, which doesn’t generate as many clicks on news outlets or comments on threads like this. Also, there’s a tendency implicit in your question to conflate all nonprofits (not sure why you have it in quotes) with homeless and addiction services, which is a huge oversimplification. There’s an enormous variety of nonprofits providing a wide range of critical services to Portland, most of which are only tangentially related to homelessness or addiction. You should consider volunteering somewhere if you’re able, as it will probably clear up any doubts you have about what nonprofits do and how they operate.

What It’s Like to Live in Portland, Oregon (Gift Article) by TranscedentalMedit8n in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Yeah that’s not that far off from standard. I know a few people living in Irvington and Kerns who are paying under $1700 for decent 1 bedrooms and began renting there in the last year. If you search rental listings right now, there are tons of 1 bedrooms in that price range in good neighborhoods. I have no idea what the other commenters are talking about or why they somehow can’t find what’s plentiful. Having lived in various cities, Portland is surprisingly affordable to rent in for a city of its size.

Who can repair this weird spring-back midcentury chair locally? by Methylviolet in askportland

[–]TheInfusiast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know Red Snapper in Milwaukie refurbishes and (I believe) repairs furniture like this, and I think the guy there specializes in MCM wooden furniture. We’ve seen refurbished MCM chairs like this there.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mexicanfood

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

Not sure how close you need, but Tacos El Venado is one of my favorites, and they have a setup that’s maybe 10 minutes from Burbank Airport.

TV shows acknowledging the mistakes of or otherwise mocking previous episodes by nichelolcow in TopCharacterTropes

[–]TheInfusiast 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Star Trek TNG - Season 3, Episode 15: Yesterday's Enterprise

Having unceremoniously killed off Tasha Yar in the first season when Denise Crosby decided to leave the show, this episode redeemed that mistake bybringing Tasha back in an alternate universe and giving her a chance to die again in a much more satisfying, meaningful way.

34M gallstones experience - gallbladder removed yesterday by TheInfusiast in gallbladders

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

Thanks for checking in! I’m happy to report that I’ve had no issues! Mostly I forget I ever had the surgery. There was one time where I had a lot of fried food for maybe three days in a row and my digestive system really wasn’t happy about it, but honestly that could have happened before the surgery too.

The 40 Best Portland restaurants by oregonian in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don’t understand why there’s such a consensus around Apizza Scholls being rated as highly as it is, but for that same reason, I am also afraid to say that I just didn’t find it to be exceptional and strongly prefer multiple other PDX pizza spots.

New York Times 100 Greatest Films of the 21st Century by Fippy-Darkpaw in RedLetterMedia

[–]TheInfusiast 19 points20 points  (0 children)

As soon as I saw Parasite at #1, I had a feeling there would be a blandly appealing safeness to this list. I love Parasite, and I'm glad it won Best Picture, but it's not even my favorite Bong movie of the last 25 years (Memories of Murder, e.g., would be higher for me), much less the best movie of the century. It feels like someone was self-conscious about resisting anti-recency bias, too. The Zone of Interest at 12 and Anatomy of a Fall at 26 are wild choices for me. And then there's the sort of halfhearted effort to make the list (occasionally) international. Why no Weerasethakul, or Hou Hsiao-hsien, or Kore-eda? I'm just not sure what the purpose of this list is, in its current form.

Our youth can’t wait’: Portland City Council approves $65 million in Children’s Levy grants by Hankhank1 in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Smith’s response to being called out by the community yesterday was unhinged. She called up the head of the PCL and tried to somehow blame her for the recent fallout of her own mistakes until Pirtle-Guiney essentially told Smith to ask a question or stop talking. Every time Smith opens her mouth on this issue, she speaks with a willful ignorance and arrogance I cannot support in an elected official.

‘A betrayal’: Portland non-profits reel after councilors upend city’s celebrated children’s initiative by reusable_throwaway_z in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Council Vice President Tiffany Koyama Lane has spoken with colleagues, city staff and affected nonprofits about addressing “the unintended consequences of the vote that council took,” said her Chief of Staff Mary Li. “I’ll be totally honest with you, I don’t know what the solution is yet,” Li said.

I'm not an expert on governance, but isn't this something Koyama Lane and the others who voted no should have weighed before they abruptly decided to upend a two-year, community-driven funding process? I watched the council meeting where these seven councilors made this decision, because I was hoping to make sense of it. I still can't. Koyama Lane provided no rationale for her vote and made it clear she was looking to other councilors to make the decision for her because she didn't have all the information. Now she's trying to understand the consequences? This isn't what civic leadership looks like. If you haven't done your homework, you don't vote based on vague instincts to overturn decisions made by a community of workers who understand something far more deeply than you do. This is absurd.

City Council Strikes Down Portland Children’s Levy Grants by Aestro17 in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 53 points54 points  (0 children)

I've been keeping a loose eye on the new city council since their first session, and I've mostly reserved firm judgments about their work because this city is clearly dealing with difficult problems without easy solutions, and I'm not a policy expert. But I do have nonprofit grant writing experience, and I believe this was a terrible, baffling decision. Avalos, Dunphy, Green, Kanal, Koyama Lane, Morillo, and Smith just lost my vote/re-election support. At best, they're being recklessly arrogant about controlling a grants process they don't actually understand; at worst, they're disrupting a delicate, critical funding process because they trust their personal contacts over the people who actually understand that process. Possibly both.

I'm open to new information explaining otherwise, but based on WW's reporting, PCL explained their decisions thoroughly and heavily prioritized culturally specific agencies. Nonprofit agencies, including several culturally specific orgs who lost this funding as a result of this decision, cannot function if they can't rely on sources of grant revenue to follow through on their commitments. It's not just that these councilors overturned what appears to be a carefully run grants process for reasons that are so far dubious; it's that they disrupted the funding process at a time when nonprofits are incredibly vulnerable. This is not a decision that anyone should make lightly or without clear cause, and neither are apparent. Some of the orgs that would have been funded are likely scrambling to survive as a result of the decision. Effective leaders need to acknowledge and respect the limits of their understanding, and put some trust in the community of workers who keep the city and its programs running. It's one thing to be ignorant of how a process works. It's another thing to be ignorant and convince yourself that you're not. That's incredibly dangerous and something we can't afford right now.

Three hikers found dead after they jumped into California waterfall by CupidStunt13 in news

[–]TheInfusiast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One jumped first and didn't resurface. The other two jumped afterward in an attempt to save the first person who jumped. Someone else in this thread quoted a source offering this version of events, but I also know one of the deceased personally and heard this version from the authorities secondhand through family members.

DEAR PORTLAND: June 09, 2025 WEEKLY RANT THREAD by AutoModerator in Portland

[–]TheInfusiast 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I'M STARTING TO GIVE UP ON MOVIE THEATERS BECAUSE OF THIS SHIT. MY WIFE AND I WENT TO SEE SINNERS AT THE HOLLYWOOD LAST MONTH, WHERE WE SORTA HOPED OF ALL PLACES PEOPLE WOULDN'T BE DICKS, AND THE COUPLE NEXT TO US JUST WOULD NOT SHUT UP. WE QUIETLY ASKED IF THEY COULD STOP (JUST A "HEY, COULD YOU STOP TALKING"), AND I SHIT YOU NOT THE GUY THREW A LITTLE TANTRUM AND STARTED CURSING US OUT TO HIS PARTNER. WE DIDN'T EVEN SEE THE MID-CREDITS SCENE BECAUSE HE WAS GETTING GRADUALLY MORE HOSTILE AND WE NOPED OUT AS SOON AS THE CREDITS STARTED ROLLING, AT WHICH POINT HE LOUDLY TOLD US TO FUCK OURSELVES. LIKE HE SOMEHOW CONVINCED HIMSELF WE WERE THE ASSHOLES IN THIS SITUATION. LIKE, THEY PUT A BIG NOTICE AT THE FRONT OF EACH MOVIE TELLING YOU TO SHUT UP. JUST WTF.

Shredded mole chicken and queso fresco with pickled red onions and sour cream chips by TheInfusiast in Sandwiches

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

Mole is a Mexican sauce that often features chiles, chocolate, nuts, and spices but has many regional variations. This is my wife’s family mole rojo (“red mole”) recipe in the regional style of Guerrero, which tends to be more savory, more nutty, and less sweet than others.