Joe Bonito

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Joe Bonito

Joe Bonito

@JoeBonitoWrites

screenwriter, trail runner, self-taught focacciaro, dad of teenager, team salsa verde all day every day

Santa Monica, CA Katılım Ekim 2019
229 Takip Edilen115 Takipçiler
B.B. Cohen
B.B. Cohen@ThaRealBenCohen·
@BootsRiley Hey Boots, I’m a Film Professor and show your work in class. I desperately need better talking points to communicate with students who really want to use AI and administrators who think its integration is the inevitable future.
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Boots Riley
Boots Riley@BootsRiley·
AI is a bust. It isnt the future for art/film/writing- beyond helping small VFX busywork TRILLIONS spent- & people barely wanna look at it, younger gen sees it as "low effort" If they ever did "get it together", theyd have a financial hole they'd never fill A crash will happen
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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@BootsRiley not to mention it also causes severe cognitive decline in people who use it regularly (see recent mit study)
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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@BootsRiley It’s also exponentially more inefficient from an energy/environmental standpoint
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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@BootsRiley 💯anyone who thinks gen AI is the answer to anything creative doesn’t understand what the purpose of art is in the first place
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herculez gomez
herculez gomez@herculezg·
Did you know that Alex Freeman’s father is an ex-NFL receiver, Antonio Freeman? … 🙄
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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@A24 I’m worried someone’s gonna step on those glasses
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Joe Bonito retweetledi
derek guy
derek guy@dieworkwear·
The Met Gala is a fundraising event that supports the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It’s just one of many annual charity galas. Others include the Angel Ball (for cancer research), Broadway Cares (for theater-related causes), Make-A-Wish (for critically ill children), Rock for the Rainforest (for environmental protection), and the Kennedy Center Honors (for the performing arts). Many organizations rely on galas to raise crucial funds for their missions. Yet the Met Gala seems to attract a disproportionate amount of derision each year, dismissed as little more than a vulgar display of wealth. By that logic, every charity gala should be equally condemned. It’s true that these events often spotlight an absurd concentration of wealth. But IMO, the criticism aimed specifically at the Met Gala reflects a deeper bias—namely, the belief that anything related to fashion (or even clothing more broadly) is inherently frivolous and undeserving of serious support. I've long said that I think fashion is uniquely disrespected because it has been historically coded as a feminine interest, even if it's at the core of how we broadcast identity (for people of any gender). This year's Met Gala celebrates the history of Black dandyism, inviting us to reflect on how marginalized groups have used clothing to challenge stereotypes and assert dignity. I won’t launch into a tirade about how clothing is central to culture, but I'd like to think this message is why my account has grown. Fashion intersects with politics, economics, globalization, sexuality, gender, identity, and nearly every other dimension of human life. Black dandyism is just one lens into that larger story, offering a way to think more thoughtfully about how clothing is used beyond trends and celebrity. So what exactly does boycotting the Met Gala accomplish? It risks cutting funding for the Costume Institute at a time when public support for the arts is already under threat, and it turns people away from a story about Black creativity and self-expression at a moment when efforts to erase DEI education from schools are gaining momentum. If anything, this is precisely when institutions like the Met should be supported—not abandoned. The Met Gala raises money for an institute that does much more than simply preserve beautiful garments. The Costume Institute curates exhibitions, maintains an extensive archive of historical dress, and uses clothing as a lens to explore broader themes of culture, politics, identity, and society. Through its shows, publications, and educational programs, it helps the public understand how fashion has shaped the world around us. In doing so, it invites visitors to see clothing not as something frivolous, but as a vital, expressive part of human history. Fundraising galas may feel extravagant, but they channel private wealth toward public enrichment. If we can motivate the wealthy to support the arts, education, medical research, environmental conservation, or any other essential cause, that should be seen as a victory, not a scandal. The real scandal would be letting these institutions wither because we were too puritanical about how money enters the system.
derek guy tweet mediaderek guy tweet mediaderek guy tweet mediaderek guy tweet media
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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@dieworkwear interesting that he paints you as being part of the problem with conceptual progressivism when he’s the one not looking at the real world implications of his own idealism.
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derek guy
derek guy@dieworkwear·
I worry that your approach doesn't actually raise income for working class people but rather serves as a convenient cudgel against immigrants.
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derek guy
derek guy@dieworkwear·
.@SohrabAhmari and @matthewstoller argue that native born people will fill garment factories once we develop tech to make work comfy and get rid of immigrants. But how many ppl do you see in this room of laser guided cutting machines? How does this help working class people?
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Sohrab Ahmari@SohrabAhmari

@dieworkwear Yes, it would drive up wages and prices. However, cut off from cheap migrants and offshoring --- two chief forms of corporate arbitrage --- employers would finally have incentives to develop labor-saving tech, boosting productivity and lowering prices in the aggregate.

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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@ConanOBrien @mulaney I wanna see this trial, but only if you both represent yourselves and the phrase kangaroo court is uttered at least ten times.
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Conan O'Brien
Conan O'Brien@ConanOBrien·
.@Mulaney and I are going to write a song together so we can get into a massive lawsuit and sue each other into oblivion. apple.co/TeamCoco
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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@RWWFilm @ZackMorrison18 @TheAcademy exactly….just to be “considered” whatever that means😑 the nuts and bolts of that whole opt-in process has never been that clear in the first place.
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Brad M Johnson
Brad M Johnson@RWWFilm·
@ZackMorrison18 @JoeBonitoWrites @TheAcademy From what I read, like other BL initiatives, you can opt-in for Nicholl consideration for any script - but you'll need to be actively hosting on the BL site and have paid for an eval - which means a min. $130 fee to be considered vs $50 for early bird on last year's Nicholl.
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Zack Morrison
Zack Morrison@ZackMorrison18·
I went to one of the schools on this list, and while I love @TheAcademy’s efforts to support film students, changing this at the expense of the integrity of Nicholls submissions does everyone a disservice. There shouldn’t be two classes of screenwriters. indiewire.com/news/general-n…
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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@ConanOBrien really thought this was gonna be a Mac ‘n Me clip
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Conan O'Brien
Conan O'Brien@ConanOBrien·
People have been asking, so here's an excerpt from my Mark Twain Prize acceptance speech: youtu.be/Yr8qPKTo8yA
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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@SPMJM @ZackMorrison18 I get the logistical reasons, but the spirit of this from a writer perspective is just more obstacles. Needing to be “vetted” before being allowed to submit to a comp is pretty gatekeepery. It’s like saying you can’t submit to Pipeline unless Austin refers you. Just feels off.
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MJM
MJM@SPMJM·
I can guess, at least one reason, why they did it—it of course takes the burden and cost of judging off their plate. Like filtering Oscar contending short films through qualifying fests instead of reviewing 9 million short films. My Q is if you’re charging upwards of $80 for a late entry (or did it go higher last season?), and it’s still not worth having a consistent and qualified team of readers and administrators every season, something feels off. Like was it not financially breakeven? Too much of a hassle? Very curious.
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herculez gomez
herculez gomez@herculezg·
I’ve never seen anyone as good at penalty kicks as Raul Jimenez. He doesn’t just shoot but automatically makes the keeper go the other way. He plays a chess game. He only missed one in his career. Insane.
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Joe Bonito
Joe Bonito@JoeBonitoWrites·
@IcoshWolves @herculezg I guess you’re right since there was zero issue on the field or on the coverage, but geez that’s about as close as it gets
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Icosh J. Villada
Icosh J. Villada@ViLLADAwxICoSH·
@JoeBonitoWrites @herculezg He kept moving forward. The rule applies when it’s a complete stop right before the kick. It isn’t the case here. A stutter isn’t a complete stop. The players have to play around the rules
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