this sounds like a party to me
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
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@rosaeldi
this sounds like a party to me
âBut if you forget to reblog Madame Zeroni, you and your family will be cursed for always and eternity.â
not even risking that shit
scrolled past this, re-evaluated my life, then SCROOOLLLED back up and hit the damn reblog button.Â
She ainât no games in real life so I take her serious all the time
Anyone with a name that starts with a âZâ, ends with an âiâ, and isnât some kind of Italian pasta, IS SERIOUS
Iâm not climbing no mountain with a pig on my back, đ đ˝đ đžđ đż Negative.
Nope. I know better, have your reblog Madame Zeroni.
who the fuck is Madame Zeroni
Look at these stupid children who donât know who Madame Zeroni is
âđžđ
Man lissen if you donât know you better ask somebody AFTER you hit the reblog button
Idk who she is but I have an exam today so Iâll reblog her
idk who she is but i have an exam today so iâll reblog her
^Haiku^bot^0.4. Sometimes I do stupid things (but I have improved with syllables!). Beep-boop!
Because wise, I am.
Oh fucks no sheâs back lmao must reblog. Iâm sorry guys
Reblogging Madame Zeroni because I would hate for my great-great grandson to get hit in the head by running shoes
idk whatâs going on but Iâm scared
Apparently someone got their car stuck on the light rail tracks at Mt. Baker. For those unfamiliar this is 35 feet up in the air
First test flight of a flying car by Mazda partially a success
I feel like the Arizona license plate should take some place in our analysis of whatever in the goddam fuck weâre looking at here
Not to burst thine bubble... but that shit's from Utah.
She played bass on 10,000 songs, including the most-played track of the twentieth century. She was paid $55 per session. Her name never appeared on the albums.
Gold Star Studios, Los Angeles, 1964. A woman in a cardigan walks past the receptionist, a Fender Precision bass in her hand like a briefcase. She doesnât sign autographs. She signs a timesheet.
Her name is Carol Kaye. In three hours, she will record what will become the most-played track of the twentieth century. Sheâll pocket fifty-five dollars and head to another studio, on the other side of town, for the next session.
The record label will never put her name on the album.
Between 1957 and 1973, Carol Kaye took part in roughly 10,000 recording sessions. Not as the featured artist, not as a guest, but as a hired hand. She was part of an anonymous collective nicknamed The Wrecking Crewâelite studio musicians who actually played the instruments on your favorite records while the famous bands posed for promotional photos.
The work was relentless. Three albums before the day was over. Stale coffee in paper cups. No rehearsal. The charts arrived minutes before the tape rolled. If you couldnât read a chart and nail the take in two tries, you didnât get called for the next session.
Carol could do it on the first try.
She started playing guitar in grimy bars at fourteen because her family couldnât pay the electric bill. Music wasnât a romantic dream for her. It was survival. It was a jobâfactory work with better acoustics and lower pay.
But she was faster and sharper than almost everyone else. She corrected charts in pencil while the producer was still explaining what he wanted. In one session in 1968, she told a famous producer his arrangement sounded like a dying dog. She chose her own line. They kept her version.
That descending bass line that drives the Beach Boysâ âWouldnât It Be Niceâ? Carol Kaye. The propulsive groove of âThese Boots Are Made for Walkinââ? Carol Kaye. The acoustic-guitar intro to âLa Bambaâ? Carol Kaye. The iconic theme from Mission: Impossible? Carol Kaye.
She invented techniques on the spot, out of sheer necessity. When the bass sound was too muddy for AM radio, she stuck felt under the strings and used a hard pick instead of her fingers. The tone cut through the static like a blade. It became the sonic signature that defined 1960s pop.
Bassists spent yearsâdecadesâtrying to crack the secret of the Beach Boysâ gear to get that sound. They were studying the wrong people. They should have been studying Carol.
She received no royalties. No residuals. No gold-record ceremony. No credit on the album sleeves. When âYouâve Lost That Lovinâ Feelinââ hit number one, Carol was already back in a studio cutting a soap jingle.
The biggest bands mimed her bass lines on TV variety shows. New York marketing departments decided a mom in classic clothes didnât fit the rebellious-youth image they were selling. So they simply left her name off the album credits.
For thirty years, almost no one cared. The truth only began to surface in the late 1990s, when music researchers found the same union contract numbers on thousands of hit records. The very documents meant to preserve studio musiciansâ anonymity betrayed them.
Think about it. Every time you heard âGood Vibrations,â âRiver Deep â Mountain High,â the Righteous Brothers, Nancy Sinatra, or Sonny and Cher, you were hearing Carol Kaye. She composed the soundtrack of an entire generationâs youth.
And yet the records still say nothing. Sheâs now over eighty. She wrote instructional books. She trained countless bassists. She is finally starting to be recognized by music historians who uncovered the truth about The Wrecking Crew.
But she never got what she deserved: her name on those albums. Credit for the music that defined an era. Recognition that those bass lines everyone associates with the âBeach Boysâ were, in fact, Carol Kayeâs.
Fifty-five dollars a session. Ten thousand sessions. The most-played track of the twentieth century.
And the world didnât know her name.
She was admitted to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2025 but refused, fuck yeah, Carol. Her official website is incredible.
@demilypyro
as a chemist i would like to say BWAHAHAHAHAHA
image description at explainXKCD:
explain xkcd is a wiki dedicated to explaining the webcomic xkcd. Go figure.
its a bit easier for astronomers
NO! Whereâs the non-metals and metaloids?!
are they hydrogen or helium
oxygen, carbon, sulfur, xenon, iodine, neon, etc etc.
ooo okay i see the confusion. you're listing off a bunch of metals there
âŚ. Youâre breaking my chemistry nerd brain. Hhhuuuhhhh???
im an astrophysicist
but but, science is science?!
and different fields of science have different conventions and definitions for their unique contexts
To my 25 - 35 year olds, you've reached the age where people around you are starting to give up on themselves because they think it's too late. Don't let that energy rub off on you. It's not too late.
I became a tattoo artist at 49.
Married the love of my life at 50.
Got my Class A CDL at 59.
You've got time.
As long as you're breathing, you've got time.
I'm working towards becoming an elevator mechanic at 37
If you see this on your dashboard, reblog this, NO MATTER WHAT and all your dreams and wishes will come true.
Oh hey! Havenât seen this in forever! Didnât reblog it when it came across me before, not gonna skip it this time, I need some good vibes.
the obvious and better version of that poll is "do you think you could take your pfp"
could you take your pfp
yes
no
i'm not sure how that would work
in a fight
yes
no
still not sure how that would work
MY FRIEND IS FINDING OUT THAT HES COLORBLIND AND WEâRE ALL HELPING HIM THROUGH IT LMAOOOOOO
UPDATE WE HAVE TWO COLORBLIND BITCHEZ IN THE SERVER
what the fuck is going on
On the last one Deuteranomaly and Protanomaly are identical though
What Iâm getting from this is that there are a lot more colorblind people in the world than even colorblind people know.
Share to save [shame] a friend
WAIT! DEUTERANOMALY AND PROTANOMALY IS THE SAME! ITâS THE FUCKING SAME! WHAT ARE YOU GUYS TALKING ABOUT?????
The deuteranomaly and protanomaly ones are very similar but they are different. The purple section ranges out a little farther to the right in the protanomaly one. Not seeing the difference between might not indicate color blindness but rather difficulty with color differentiation.
The green is also slightly more vivid in the protanomaly strip than it is in the deuteranomaly one.
@skeletal-spire-man-aka-overfit
um
these are not the same
Theyâre⌠Theyâre identicalâŚ
Whatâs⌠Whatâs the difference-?
welp. one of the moots has tritanomaly colour blindness!
Iâm not colourblind, but like, on the last one, deuteranomaly and protanomaly are identical to eachother- so are protanopia and deuteranopia-
They arenât different?
I feel like I should add this
https://www.keithcirkel.co.uk/whats-my-jnd/?r=AOkgKP__79w8
I got a good grade at color definition, something that is both reasonable and attainable to do
I got 0.0062
The thing is, even if you were lucky and your parents taught you how to clean, they probably didn't teach you how to clean the stuff you clean stuff with, like brushes, mops, sponges, rags, and so on. Or how to clean your cleaning appliances, like a dish washer, clothes washing machine, and clothes dryer and its ducts (if you have a ducted dryer), or a carpet cleaner, vacuum, Or how to clean up clean messes, like spilled bleach or detergent.
My parents threw away all of these things (even the vacuum cleaners and the dryer) when they got too dirty to function, because no one even told them THAT they could be cleaned. Cost them thousands of dollars over the years.
All I'm saying is that cleaning is not intuitive, and not knowing how to clean is not a moral failing, but it is something you can learn.
I'm going to reblog this post with resources for learning how to clean things and how to clean cleaning things (I'm not at my desk at the moment). If you have any favorites, please feel free to add them in too!
I like this video because it does a great job of introducing the basic foundations of house cleaning (and because he doesn't use bleach, which is a common allergy in addition to being awful to inhale). He also talks a little about how to clean a vacuum. And why you shouldn't put grease from your pots and pans down the sink drain. I also love that he mentions that different houses and different people have different needs and different versions of what clean and cleaning looks like.
He doesn't mention though that the toilet seat comes off. I take my toilet seat off to clean under the hinges and clean the seat more thoroughly once a quarter.
This is another video from the same guy about cleaning and depression. This advice, especially at the beginning, can feel really really difficult and oppressive to hear. However, I find that it's generally pretty solid. But I'm autistic and so is he, so that gets a massive Your Mileage May Vary stamp on it.
I have a favorite part of this video. It's from 10:52 to 12:36. I think we could all use to hear that. There's a HEFTY pause after that one. I promise the narration does come back.
I'm also going to recommend KC Davis' book "How To Keep House While Drowning"
This is a pair of videos about how to correctly load and use a dish washer.
The first one is a quick 1 minute 30 second overview on loading. I can't find the exact video I'm looking for, so consider this a substitute for that. If I can find the one I'm looking for, I'll swap it in.
The second is a half hour deep dive on dishwashers and detergents. The short form of that is you shouldn't need to pre-rinse anything, detergent pods are overpriced and can cause problems, some dishwashers have a filter in the bottom that needs to be cleaned (but most don't), run your sink until the water is HOT before starting your dish washer, and put a little detergent in the pre-rinse dispenser when you're washing extra dirty dishes (or on the inside of the door if your dishwasher doesn't have a pre-rinse dispenser).
Favorite Scrub Brushes + How to Clean Them. The right tools for cleaning tasks make all the difference! Scrub brushes are great tools and it
Here's a blog post about scrubbing brushes and how to clean them.
And a video for all cleaning tools, including scrub brushes. This video does use bleach. I'll try to find some alternatives to that.
How to clean a front load washer (with bleach). This should be done monthly or every time you wash really soiled clothes.
With expert tips and tricks for all types of washers.
How to clean a top loader (without the removable agitator thing). This should be done every 1-3 months depending on you unit, or every time you wash really soiled clothes.
Regular cleaning of a top-load washing machine will prolong the life of the appliance and leave your laundry cleaner and brighter.
How to clean a top loader (with the removable agitator thing). This should be done every month, or every time you wash really soiled clothes.
This video is for pet owners.
These carpet brushes are a LIFE SAVER if you have dogs. This thing allows me to go from vacuuming about 4 square feet before my vacuum is full to vacuuming half the living room (I don't vacuum often enough. You should vacuum weekly, and I just can't.). I have to unclog the vacuum less often. It fluffs up some of the flat spots in the carpet. And I also use the brush to shampoo my rugs in the spring.
A spot cleaner (or a carpet cleaner with a spot cleaner attachment) is another life saver, ESPECIALLY if you can afford to splurge on a heated one. I see them at Goodwill or at yard sales occasionally, and they're worth picking up. The shark one in the video is great too.
This channel is gold. There's tutorials for cleaning EVERYTHING on there. Just go subscribe!
Gonna throw another potential resource at the end of this very long list, which may be potentially helpful for others like me who loathe videos. It's... the weirdest thing that has genuinely been helpful to me in housekeeping. Absolutely full of useful advice, and bizarrely still relevant in large part. (Though, caveat, research ANYTHING to do with chemicals or cleaning products more complicated than vinegar + lemon + water for modern information.)
It's America's Housekeeping Book (1941). Available for free download on the Internet Archive. (Large PDF file at the link here).
The LISTS y'all. The step by step lists. The emphasis on efficiency and arranging spaces for the least resistance possible. The basic concept of "take a tray or basket into a room when you are tidying up so you can put things that belong elsewhere on it and take them out LATER in ONE GO".
My ADHD-having ass could cry.
I swear, some of you people somehow manage to possess all of the three most unfortunate character traits someone can have: a) kinda stupid, b) obnoxiously contrarian, c) deeply annoying.
stuff you say when you donât give a fuck about women quite frankly
Hence the not-uncommon adage that the washing machine did even more for women's liberation than the birth control pill
Here is a free pdf of the players handbook
Here is a free pdf of xanathars guide to everything
Here is a free pdf to monsters manual
Here is a free pdf to tashas cauldron of everything
Here is a free pdf to dungeon masterâs guide
Here is a free pdf to voloâs guide to monsters
Here is a free pdf of mordenkainenâs tomb of foes
For all your dnd purposes
Reblogging for other dnd nerds
>^>
also here is a whole website that not only has a shit ton of adventures and such but lets you search for any item or npc or whatever and see their stats and info at your fingertips
reblog to bite your mutuals
What's a cover letter actually for? I'm not asking for the usual tips and tricks on how to make one; I'm more confused about what people are doing with them on the other end. How long does someone spend with one? What are they using it to determine? Is it preparing them for how to read the story, or is it filling in for parts of it so they can read through it faster? (I mean, yes, I don't want to write them. But I also want to know why someone wants/needs them on the other end. The tips and tricks never seem to convey much of that.)
Okay; let's start with the very basics, then move on to what you're curious about.
What I was taught about this (and I have a memory of my agent nodding with approval when he heard it) was as follows:
All your cover letter needs to do is announce to your intended recipient who you are and what you're enclosing with the letter, with the very VERY briefest description of the contents of the enclosure itself... and then to express the hope that your intended reader at that agency will enjoy it.
Job done. Sign it and send everything off. That is all you need, and all that anybody at the agency end wants to see. Your brief description of what you're submitting will let them know how to move forward from there.
We'll come back to the "what are they getting out of this?" issue momentarily. But let me touch on a couple of small but important details here:
Don't just send a letter to an agency or a publisher. Find the name of the specific person you want to be sending it to. (And one of the pages I'll recommend to you [and everybody else] in a bit begs you to spell their name correctly. You'd think this would be a small thing that everybody would get right, but... no. )
And also: Carefully read the agent's or agency's or publisher's page about what kind of material they're looking for (and what they're not looking for). Sometimes they'll even tell you exactly what they want to see in a cover letter. Ignore such instructions at your peril.
That goes to the heart of the "what's all this for?" question. And the simplest answer is:
It's a test.
The way you handle your cover letter helps the agent determine whether you're likely to be worth the time they may be about to spend dealing with you.
Agents are a very specific type of creative (many of them are also writers: mine certainly is...) and they have the same dread of wasting time that all the rest of us have. The way you handle a cover letter reveals to them some very basic things about you that will affect whether an agent or publisher wants to deal with you any further.
Think of the cover letter's part in this evaluation process as your reaction to being presented with an entry-level sieve featuring pretty wide holes. If you can't make it through those holes, you may well be deemed to not be worth the agent's time. The cover letter is your chance to demonstrate whether you can make it through the initial (and easiest) level of the sieve.
And the most important of the issues your potential agent is "sieving for" may simply be this:
Can you follow instructions / directions?
Publishing is full of situations that have to proceed/unfold in a certain way, or in a certain order, to succeed. Your cover letterâhow it looks, how it's addressed, what it contains, what comes with itâwill give your potential agent, publisher or editor a vital initial sense of where you fall on the following-directions spectrum. For example:
Have you actually read the agency's or agent's info on what they're looking for? (Because if your cover letter makes it plain that you haven't, or if you've responded as if you haven't, you're already in trouble. This may involve genre-based limitations (don't want SF or mystery, do want romance, don't want a specific kind of fantasy the field's glutted with at the moment, etc etc...). Or it may involve something length-oriented or structural. Is your correspondent asking for, let's say, a specific kind of "partial"âthree chapters and an outline used to be typicalâbut you've sent them a whole novel instead? Uh oh. Not good.
Does the tone or content of your cover letter suggest that you think you're the next [fill in the name of currently-hot writer]? Calmly-expressed self-confidence is one thing: overexcited declarations of your fabulous talent are something else. Come across as any kind of a prima donna, and you may invoke a bout of agentic eyerolling that will deep-six your chances.
So even in so short a thing as the introductory part of a cover letter should be, tone is an issue. And now comes the next layer of the sieve. where the hole you have to slip through gets significantly smaller.
Does your very, VERY brief description of your enclosure make your letter-reader more interested in reading it, or less?
This is where stuff gets tough, and where even the most experienced of us could well spend hours laboring over a single paragraph. I'm sitting here thinking "How can I concentrate into a single paragraph the necessary information about a single book that will create enough interest, both in the content and in my voice, to make someone want to read it who'd never heard of me before?" ...And the concept unquestionably makes me break out in a sweat. Because this isn't easy to do... and is still so revealing, even if the writer doesn't pull it off.
With all the above in mind, the answer to the question "How long will they spend with my cover letter?" is, "Only as much time as it takes to work out whether you've passed the test or flunked it."
...So let me play a hand of this game. Here's a cover letter.
That looks straightforward enough, yeah? For something written in about ten minutes, it's not too bad. It accurately sums up the novel in not too many words (84, I think, for that one long paragraph), the tone is quirky but otherwise neutral, and hopefully leaves the reader thinking "Okay, what happens next?"
...It is, however, a definite fail on one minor and one major count.
The minor one is that the author (perhaps obsessing over lamb recipes again...) has neglected to mention her email address or phone number in the cover letter. ALWAYS let your correspondent have email / phone contact info for you in your cover letter document, and on the cover page of the PDF of the work you're submitting. Addresses and contact info do get lost in busy agencies. It lies with you to make sure that doesn't happen to your query, by providing contact info in every appropriate place that you can. The appearance of a letter without this basic necessary info could very well get the query immediately tossed without a second thought: who needs the extra effort involved in tracking down this person's mail info? Honestly.
More to the point, though, when reading the agent''s own info page at their website, you need to make sure that person is actually accepting queries... and Don's page expressly and explicitly says that for the last year, he's "permanently closed to queries except by referral or invitation." So egregious a Failure To Read And/Or Follow Instructions is almost certainly going to get that query tossed. (shrug) Them's the breaks. Hopefully next time this author'll be more careful.
So the best advice about cover letters is: slow down, take your time, don't leave out anything important. And polish that sentence or two of description of your work until it shines... because it will do 90% of that letter's work.
...Now let me add a couple of links to good pages that deal with other points.
"The Perfect Cover Letter" at JaneFriedman.com
The Perfect Covering Letter with Literary Agent Simon Trewin
...In any case: hope this has been some help. :)
all video games should have a âIâm shit at video games but Iâm curious about the story and I donât want to watch a letâs playâ mode
I am
I made this post because I am disabled and no matter how much I practice there are some games I will never be able to play because I physically cannot move my fingers the way you have to and the responses to this post from other disabled people, people who grew up unable to play video games, and people who just arenât very good at them has been extremely enthusiastically positive, while people who apparently canât conceive of the idea that some people will never be good at gaming condescendingly comment, tag or send me asks telling me to try easy mode or to get good despite the fact that the feature Iâm describing already exists in some games and mods. if youâre part of the latter group, consider that some of us can not ever be good at video games and we still deserve to be able to participate and have fun
Ok, real talk, if you play PC games I use a program called Wemod that has settings for almost every game ever and you can change them to suit your needs Unlimited health? one hit kill? unlimited items? They canât mod multiplayer games, but every genre of game imaginable is on Wemod so I use it for everything from stardew valley, subnautica, hades, farming sim and more! It mods the games to your level of ease without needing to mess with any files or get deep into webpages for mods yourself It is a life changer
FYI âŹď¸âŹď¸âŹď¸
Only passing along as the only games I play are on my phone.
Get an older sibling and have them play the game and you watch
One, this is older siblings who watch younger siblings play erasure, two thatâs not the point. People deserve to enjoy the experience of playing a game for themselves. Watching someone play is fun. Playing yourself is a different kind of fun.
There are so many reasons why someone wouldnât want to be challenged by a game, and itâs ridiculous that people canât fathom someone requiring a different gameplay than themselves.Â
Back in the dark ages when I was a kid and we got our first computer, my dad noticed that I was sad because I wanted to play computer games like him, so he would let me play his games in god mode. Should a five year old have been playing Ultimate Doom? Absolutely not. Did I enjoy the shit out of it, particularly the part where I couldnât die and could just wander around aimlessly machine gunning demons to death with no real goal in mind? Hell yes.
Also, no one should have to explain the reason they want to play the game in god mode.
That is absolutely none of your business, if someone wants to play the game with max items, weapons, armor, money etc., whatever reason theyâre playing that way for. YOU, the anon on the internet have no business knowing or shitting on how they play. Itâs THEIR game, and THEIR gameplay experience. and I hope OP was able to play their game the way they wanted to without being stymied by the games mechanics.
Oh shit, I have something for this!
Can I Play That provides accessibility focused game reviews and news. For Disabled Gamers, By Disabled Gamers.
Can I Play That? is a fantastic resource for fellow disabled folks who want to play video games, as well as non-disabled video game devs who want to make their games more accessible. I highly recommend checking it out!
.
we're not going to make it
we will make it
it'll take too long to rebuild ourselves
we will make it
but what if we don't wake up in the morning
we will make it
i don't see a future with me in it
we will make it
we'll give up long before then
we will make it
im scared
i love you. we will make it
the item you held last {phone doesn't count} just disappeared, just poof stopped existing are you mad about it?
yes
no
happy actually?
NOOOOOOOOO
neutral
results