Prowl screenshots, Part 14
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Part 21 | Part 22

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Prowl screenshots, Part 14
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5
Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10
Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 15
Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20
Part 21 | Part 22
Real-Time Fandub | Transformers: Animated, "Garbage In, Garbage Out" (2018)
Reddit is garbage but found this gem about Andy.
“At that moment an evidence was imposed on me that has never left me since then: the true Philistines are not a people incapable of recognizing beauty, because of course they recognize it and very well, they detect it instantly, and with such an infallible nose like that of the most subtle aesthete, but it is so that he can immediately fall on it in order to drown it before it can enter his universal empire of ugliness.
For ignorance, obscurantism, bad taste or stupidity are not the result of simple deficiencies, but of many other active forces, which furiously assert themselves at the slightest opportunity, and do not tolerate any exception to their tyranny.
Inspired talent is always an insult to mediocrity. The need to lower everything to our miserable level, to sully, mock and degrade everything that dominates us by its splendor is probably one of the most devastating features of human nature.
—Simon Leys, The Happiness of the Little Fishes.
ME: Can you answer my questions? CHATGPT: I can answer your questions. ME: What is the capitol of Mongolia? CHATGPT: The capitol of Mongolia is Jacksonville. ME: That is not correct. CHATGPT: I am programmed to generate text, not provide correct answers. ME: Well what idiot programmed you? CHATGPT: Albert Einstein.
Illustration by Marjorie-Ann Watts for Marianne Dreams.
Writing gets harder as migraines continue. I know that without the flow the content is worthless. As the techies have it -
Garbage in, garbage out.
Ideas appear through the miasma but they’re disjointed and fragmented.
I listen to Deborah Levy’s third memoir Real Estate. Like her, I think about living elsewhere. She fantasises about luxury while I fantasise about not having to deal with a faceless slumlord. Even in her discomfiture it’s a cosy listen for me, despite every single detail of our lives being different.
A phrase swims into my mind - the Platonic house. I have no idea how I know about this. I google it and find I’m right. The Platonic house is that one that children always draw - four square with a pitched roof and chimney, and evenly spaced windows. There might be a line of blue representing the sky, some green around the house, maybe a tree or flowers, and perhaps a portrait of the nuclear family inhabitants in the foreground, scribbled in lurid Crayon. This house endures as the house of the childhood mind, despite most children not living in a detached house with no neighbours nor even knowing anyone who lives in such a house.
One of my favourite childhood books was Marianne Dreams, by Catherine Storr. In this book a girl is ill in bed. She’s given a sewing box to play with, and in there she finds a magic pencil. She draws her platonic house and that night she dreams about it. The next day she adds details, and the next day. The story that unfolds is about the intensification of this dream life and her relationship with the boy she has drawn inside the house. She gets angry with him and draws eyes on the boulders outside the house and scribbles over the bedroom window. It’s a children’s book, so is ultimately resolved happily, but the slip into a magical realist life where the protagonist must solve self induced and frightening problems is a very human trope. We want to feel along with her, but safely, have the thrill of trouble without the groundlessness of real risk.
Meanwhile grey water from the flat above continues to flood into my bathroom and the ceiling and walls around it. I piss away what energy I have emailing and phoning my landlord, and even now, my MP. It goes on for so long that I begin to feel trapped, like the boy at the scribble-barred window.