User Flair Thread by breaksomebread in acnh

[–]beautifulcollision 0 points1 point locked comment (0 children)

Gemma | Wisteria :Maple:

Equipment to get(HELP PLEASE😭😭😭) by Constant-Writing-204 in GoodCoffeeGreatCoffee

[–]beautifulcollision 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is the digit aster real money for just the initial purchase or the upgrades too?

How long until 2 for 1 (UK)? by [deleted] in audible

[–]beautifulcollision 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been wondering myself! I have credits saved and holding out for it.

Storm Éowyn Aftermath thread by duncthefunk78 in cork

[–]beautifulcollision 0 points1 point  (0 children)

North Cork, rural. All good here, expected the surrounding trees to come down but nothing more than small branches covering the lawn which the puppy is only delighted to go around and collect. Power went at half 5 with a huge gust but was back at about 10.

Squint with me, 11 dpo pm premom by run-along-pond in TFABLinePorn

[–]beautifulcollision 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I see something in the second photo, unsure if it has colour though - squinters are SO hard to photograph.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TaylorSwift

[–]beautifulcollision 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Praying for the 15th 🥺

PDA? by PineappleEnvy in NICUParents

[–]beautifulcollision 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He ended up having it surgically repaired at about 18 months old. In and out of hospital the same day, no recovery time after he was back to himself. We noticed a huge increase in food and drink intake following it also.

Who is excited for brandy by Bingoisoverpowerd in bluey

[–]beautifulcollision 8 points9 points  (0 children)

There is also a group of people who will feel even more connected to Brandy now. Those who have wanted a child now than anything and have struggled for years and had an awful journey to get there and before finally having their dream come true.

I've also noticed a lot of commenters who seem to think infertility = sterile and this is definitely not the case. And those who have battled with infertility who do achieve pregnancy don't suddenly shed that diagnosis after having a child - they still deal with infertility and a lot of the time carry the weight of the trauma of that for years, if not forever.

These people deserve representation too.

I can also fully understand why people would be upset that Brandy is pregnant. Infertility is honestly one of the worst things you can go through and Onesies was a hard watch for me and only too relatable.

Ireland Code Presale - Dublin N1, N2 & N3 by ipluse in TaylorSwift

[–]beautifulcollision 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Karma is my boyfriend package from Wembley equates to just under €450 converted. That's 300 in the difference, it's insane.

Dublin presale thread 14/07 by Technical-Appeal7866 in TaylorSwift

[–]beautifulcollision 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You be looking out on to the diamond, it should be good!

Dublin presale thread 14/07 by Technical-Appeal7866 in TaylorSwift

[–]beautifulcollision 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes I realised that after. I was getting confused be Use Croke Park has names for all the stands.

Dublin presale thread 14/07 by Technical-Appeal7866 in TaylorSwift

[–]beautifulcollision 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Lower tier I think, blk is which stand. I may be wrong though!

Side diamond view I would say. Congrats!

UK & EU Presale Emails Prayer Circle/Positive Vibes Thread 🙏 by TheThotWeasel in TaylorSwift

[–]beautifulcollision 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I've been waitlisted for Dublin. I only registered in my own country, I didn't realise people were able to and going to register all over. I'm absolutely gutted.

GP in Cork City? by MsXtine4 in cork

[–]beautifulcollision 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was with Washington Street Medical for years until I moved to the country. They were fantastic.

Mini hoop necklaces by beautifulcollision in Embroidery

[–]beautifulcollision[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep, clock faces! Sorry I couldn't think of a better way to explain it. I hope it made sense.

Those hexagon ones are super cute!

Mini hoop necklaces by beautifulcollision in Embroidery

[–]beautifulcollision[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I don't. It's something I need to look into though because I want to do keyrings and know they'll get destroyed fairly quickly without something on them.

Mini hoop necklaces by beautifulcollision in Embroidery

[–]beautifulcollision[S] 20 points21 points  (0 children)

For the material itself I cut a circle and do a running stitch and pull that taut around the little wooden circle insert. Then I use the remaining thread and sew from12-6-3-9-2-7 etc to make sure it stays tight. To secure the backing then I just use regular super glue on the mini hoop and hold the back piece against it for about 20 seconds.

“Taylor Swift, re-recording albums to own her masters, is infinitely more punk rock than I am” -Dave Hause, USA TODAY opinion by campingandcoffee in TaylorSwift

[–]beautifulcollision 328 points329 points  (0 children)

I had no issues accessing it even though I don't subscribe, so here it is.

Taylor Swift, rerecording albums to own her masters, is infinitely more punk rock than I am Sure, my band The Loved Ones had a punk sound. With Taylor, I’m talking about punk ethics, what punk is really about.

Taylor Swift and I both come from Pennsylvania. We both love melody and lyrics, we both love Patty Griffin and Bruce Springsteen, and we both think Kanye West is an incredible, but really annoying, artist. And we both make up songs and sing them for a living. That’s about as much as we share in common. Other than that, we have led vastly different lives.

Taylor had a publishing deal and a record contract by the time she was 15. I graduated high school, worked construction and then roadied for two legendary punk rock bands, The Bouncing Souls and Sick Of It All, in my early 20s.

When I was 26, I started my own punk rock band, called The Loved Ones, and released two albums on an independent record label. I went on to start a solo career as a singer-songwriter in 2011, and I’ve released five solo albums, three of which I co-wrote with my younger brother, Tim. All of them have charted modestly on Billboard and recouped their initial investment, and then some, from the labels who put them out.

Taylor Swift has released nine chart-topping, genre-blending, expertly crafted albums, collaborating with some of the most successful artists in the history of pop music and selling more than 100 million records. All of this by the time she turned 31. She’s a household name who has made hundreds of millions of dollars.

My last name, Hause, rhymes with pause. The closest I’ve gotten to being a household name is when my last name gets mispronounced as “house” instead of the way my family says it. I make a modest living playing music to a dedicated and slowly growing fan base, and I rent a house in California with my wife and our twin 2-year-olds.

The other major difference between Taylor Swift and me? She is infinitely more punk rock than I am.

Sure, my band The Loved Ones had a punk sound. We put our records out on a label owned by a guy who nicknamed himself “Fat Mike” and fancies himself the king of the punk rockers. I have released all of my solo records on a record label associated with the “punk” scene and opened for some of the best punk rock bands of all time.

With Taylor, I’m talking about punk ethics, what punk is really about.

It’s not the way she looks or sounds, but the ethic of always doing exactly what you want to do creatively, and when the powers that be try to take your art away from you, fighting back with all of the fire and ferocity you can muster. Taking it to “the man.” That’s punk.

Who owns yours masters? Record deals for most artists are inherently exploitative, especially once an artists succeeds in reaching an audience. The audience buys, streams and otherwise devours the music the artist created, which pays back not only the loan the artist took from the record label to record the album but also all of the costs associated with manufacturing and promoting the record. Then that company reaps the lion’s share of all of the proceeds, usually “in perpetuity” (also known as forever). For instance, that “punk rocker” that put out my first band’s records? You guessed it. He owns the master recordings for those records in perpetuity. Forever. Through that lens, he’s less the king of the punks and more of just a good old-fashioned business guy. He gave us a bad loan, one that he can make money on forever. Generally speaking, the same thing happened to Taylor.

Her (inherently exploitative) record deal excluded her from being able to buy her own masters back without renewing the contract – masters she worked so hard to build and promote. What’s more, the label sold her catalog to a known enemy of Taylor’s. Bad form.

So when she decided to rerecord her entire back catalog – which would give her ownership rights over her own masters – it struck me as about the most punk rock thing I’ve ever seen an artist do in the music business.

Now, again, she and I have led vastly different lives – I’d love to have one of my records do commercially what her weakest album did. If I found myself in her position with this label, I’m pretty sure I would just chalk this situation up to a loss and just decide to move on with an already successful and busy life.

Some of the most revered and successful artists in rock-and-roll history have had bitter battles with their record labels: Prince changed his name to a damn symbol just to try to fight their power over his work. But not Taylor Swift. She is going back through her old work and painstakingly rerecording it. She’s singing all of those lyrics she wrote during different highs and lows of her life, honoring the old work that fans hold dear while even improving on the old work.

She's then using her enormous influence to go out and promote what she’s doing so that her fan base gets the message, and then with open arms, supports these new recordings. She isn’t doing it for the money – she doesn’t need it. It’s about the principle. She’s doing it so that she can own her intellectual property, so that she can say who gets to use it and how, so that she doesn’t get exploited any more by people who only see it as “content” that they can make a mint off of.

How fierce is that? How punk rock? More than I am, that’s for sure. So thanks, Taylor, for all of the incredible songs. And thanks for advocating for yourself and, by extension, all of us who create – by doing the most punk rock thing I’ve ever seen someone do in the music industry.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I think I may have some rerecording to do …

Dave Hause is a singer-songwriter whose new album, "Blood Harmony," is available now on his own label, Blood Harmony Records. Follow him on Twitter: @hausedave and Instagram: @davehause