TheHat

6.9K posts

TheHat

TheHat

@millhist

Interested in,news and NASCAR and F1.

Joined Mart 2010
77 Following32 Followers
TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@BattleSquire90 At one of the Olympics when W was president, the American commentators were very proud that the European crowd wasn’t booing the Americans apparently not understanding that Europeans don’t boo; they whistle.
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Shepherdess
Shepherdess@ShepherdessAnne·
@simonowens They are basing it off the political journalism, where the politicians had access to this sort of optimization first. Really I don’t know how The Boys got away with just being blatant in metaphor about how things operate.
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Simon Owens
Simon Owens@simonowens·
I wholeheartedly endorse this piece. It annoys the hell out of me that there's an entire cottage industry of business "journalism" that consists of taking some outlandish claim made by a tech CEO -- often in a tweet or offhand comment -- and then crafting karlbode.com/ceo-said-a-thi…
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@kHartos44 @RadioFreeTom The week before Nixon resigned his approval within the Republican Party was still at 50%.
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It’s Kyle
It’s Kyle@kHartos44·
@RadioFreeTom As Frum recently pointed out, Hoover got 38% of the vote in 1932. The floor is remarkably high.
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@Crime_Penguin This is nonsense. The reason Japanese manga and anime characters often have large eyes is because they were originally influenced by Disney animation. Tempura the Portuguese for that. Baseball the US. Buddhism China
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@Ynde_V @bugsandfishes Yep it’s just engagement bait. We need to just block these people instead of dunking on them.
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Ynde
Ynde@Ynde_V·
@bugsandfishes I'm actually going to go with the "blue checkmark gets paid when people express their complete bewilderment at this question" as the reasoning for this poll
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Koi@skyriderlink·
@rieglobe Yup they reveal their true self on twitter. Thanks to translate button, more and more people are finding out about them. That's actually started undoing the huge softpower chokehold they had over past decades
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Rie Yano やのりえ
The reason X/twitter won Japan is simple: Both twitter & facebook entered Japan in 2008. Facebook forced real names in a country raised on anonymous internet culture (2ch, Mixi). So Facebook became performative, basically LinkedIn. Twitter let you be pseudonymous. Cat/dog/anime profiles took over. So that’s where people were most authentic and ideas flowed.
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@katefeetie The best part is after a DoorDash read then pushing their Patreon…..
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@THR Somebody needs to ask this fool which was the party of the “southern strategy “?
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Baseball fallout 🇩🇴
@millhist @Stephen_Fremel @axiochrono My point is that you're operating under a false principle, you can't presume that superman exist in the Harry Potter universe because she didn't explicitly say he's a comic book character. That's insane, lmao.
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@upper_pp @Stephen_Fremel @axiochrono But she hasn’t said the opposite either. So we only go with the evidence we do have. Which is the snapshot in time magical UK in the 1990s.
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Baseball fallout 🇩🇴
@Stephen_Fremel @millhist @axiochrono Because I'm guessing that at no point J.K said that the amount of wizards is proportionately similar to the UK in the rest of the world, so you not accepting the simple analogy that size of population is irrelevant to proportion is completely irrational, lol.
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@upper_pp @Stephen_Fremel @axiochrono If you reread what I said I’m just using it as a metric to determine the size of the UK magical population. I’m saying nothing about international.
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Baseball fallout 🇩🇴
@millhist @Stephen_Fremel @axiochrono I always see this argument and for the life of me I can never understand why all of you think that the amount of wizards should be proportionate to hogwarts and the U.K, there is literally no reason for this.
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@Stephen_Fremel @axiochrono Lord help me I looked it up. It’s on Minami Iwo Jima which is an uninhabited Ireland near Iwo Jima . I guess I should consider her not putting it in Mount Suribachi restraint on her part.
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@Stephen_Fremel @axiochrono It’s been a while since I read the extra material, but the East Asian magical school is in Japan. Rowling mentions cherry wood wands being especially prized the woman does not do subtle.
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@Stephen_Fremel @axiochrono Oh I agree her logic makes no sense I was just pointing out that at least for the UK it’s a really small population. Like probably not genetically viable.
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Steveroni François 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
@millhist @axiochrono But the UK is a small place, around 70 million people currently. The US alone is almost triple that so if we keep that same rate even at the lowest we're looking at 30,000 for one school, that's ridiculous A lot of these schools span countries with multiple languages
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@Stephen_Fremel @axiochrono And yes, magical lifespans are longer, which would push that number higher—but it’s still a surprisingly small, tightly connected population.
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@Stephen_Fremel @axiochrono About 10 students are in Harry’s house in his year. Multiply across four houses and seven years and you get under 300 at Hogwarts. Scale that over a normal lifespan and the UK wizarding population is roughly 10,000–15,000.
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TheHat
TheHat@millhist·
@scratchthatout Back in the days of the New York publishers this was pretty typical. 10% royalty for domestic US 5% for international. Of course heavy hitters could tweak things a bit around the edges.
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Vee
Vee@scratchthatout·
3 percent from overseas sales.... felt my stomach drop into my boots.
Boichi@Boichi_Bo1

This may be a somewhat unfortunate observation, but the Japanese manga industry does not pay much attention to overseas markets. In a way, this situation is remarkably similar to Hollywood up until the 1980s. Hollywood films were global hits, yet their storytelling and visual style were clearly created primarily for American audiences and the domestic market. The reason becomes clear when you look at the revenue structure. The global manga market can be roughly divided into $5 billion in Japan’s domestic market and about $6 billion overseas. In terms of market size alone, the overseas market is actually larger than Japan’s domestic market. (Of course, the data may not be perfectly precise, and I appreciate your understanding.) However, from the perspective of mangakas, the situation looks very different. In Japan, royalties on tankōbon (collected volumes) are typically around 10%, whereas overseas royalties are usually only about 3%. This means that the total expected royalty income for Japanese manga artists is approximately: $500 million from the domestic market, but only about $200 million from overseas markets. (In reality, the situation is more complex—since not all domestic revenue comes from print volumes, and e-book royalty rates differ—but the overall conclusion remains the same: domestic earnings exceed $500 million.) If we look specifically at North America, the Japanese manga market there is about $1.1 billion, yet the expected returns to Japanese creators are only about one-fifteenth of what they earn in the domestic Japanese market. In short, while the overseas market is large, the income flowing back is relatively small. This is even more pronounced from the perspective of publishers. Because of this, Japanese manga—like Hollywood films before the 1990s—are not created with strong consideration for overseas audiences. Hollywood only began to seriously consider international audiences when direct distribution expanded in the 1990s. From that point on, the concept of “well-made” productions, designed for global appeal, began to emerge. Similarly, if Japanese manga begins to directly reach overseas markets through digital platforms, creators will naturally start to place greater importance on international readers. People often believe that works themselves shape the market—but in reality, it is usually the market that shapes the works and the mindset behind them. And in the 21st century, markets are shaped by VISION AND FORESIGHT. I recently saw an article suggesting that the Japanese government—specifically the Ministry of Education—is attempting a bold initiative in this direction. What will the future of manga look like? No one can say for certain. But it is clear that Japanese creators, readers, and publishers all need to begin preparing. Perhaps those who need to prepare the most are the existing overseas manga publishers. Every change is an opportunity. I hope you will keep that in mind and prepare for what lies ahead. Thank you so much for taking the time to read this long message. 5/5 P.S. I was planning to end this long message here, but as I was writing, a few more thoughts came to mind—so I’d like to continue a bit further.^^

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