Wade 왜드

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Wade 왜드

Wade 왜드

@WadeThruRivers

Otherside Katılım Mart 2009
429 Takip Edilen657 Takipçiler
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Z
Z@BrianZisook·
Virality is manufactured. Nothing is real.
Z tweet media
New York Magazine@NYMag

Joe Lim estimates that 90 percent of what you see on the internet is advertising in disguise, and he should know. For three years, Lim ran a company called Floodify, which at its peak operated 65,000 dummy social-media accounts used to drum up attention on behalf of paying clients. The point of this kind of marketing is that nobody is supposed to notice it. But lately, the machinery has started to show. In April, Justin Bieber headlined two consecutive weekends at Coachella. Coachella is the biggest stage in pop music save only for the Super Bowl, the kind of event that in theory generates its own attention. And yet on both weekends, a Discord server writer Lane Brown had been monitoring hosted paid campaigns for Bieber’s Coachella performances, offering clippers — people who are hired to turn a song, trailer, interview, stump speech, or whatever into short, social-media-friendly fragments — as much as a dollar per thousand views. “On social media, popular opinion is being formed, measured, and manipulated all at once, and every signal the platforms produce — a trending song, a backlash, a talking point, the feeling that ‘everybody’ is suddenly talking about the same thing — can now be fabricated by unseen actors with hidden agendas,” writes Brown. “Everybody is doing this now,” Lim says. “And if you’re not, you’re behind.” Brown reports on how the same techniques are now being used to fool people on every app they go to in order to find out what other people think, not just in music but across entertainment, politics, consumer products, and celebrity gossip: nymag.visitlink.me/w6Bu9N

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Wade 왜드
Wade 왜드@WadeThruRivers·
@Speedkicks There's a lot of books about this, (Derivative Media, Blank Space), but after the 90's & 9/11 there was a cultural pushback against indie snobs & critics. This lead to unregulated optimism. ie, the death of the revolutionary, the establishment of wall street & culture valuation
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Wade 왜드
Wade 왜드@WadeThruRivers·
@Speedkicks there was a whole film crew at Woodstock they knew exactly how bad it was. the real issue is death of counter culture, the "let people enjoy things" era. its a combination of art becoming capital, the algorithm controlling the narrative, and that everything is a safe derivative.
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Speedkicks
Speedkicks@Speedkicks·
Hypothesis that cultural stagnation is a downstream effect of everything always being recorded. The past needs to mythologize! I bet we lose a few 90s rock legends if they grew up reading old tweets bout the smell at Woodstock.
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Mirage | Joey Fury
Mirage | Joey Fury@Joey_Fury·
When some of my friends wanted to learn Tekken, I taught them about fundamentals and how they should approach a match. Then said, "You will apply these ideas. And then you will lose to people who have no idea what they are doing. Over and over and over."
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RadiantFilm
RadiantFilm@RadiantFilm·
John Alcott on filming the “candlelight” scenes in Barry Lyndon (1975), from an interview by Herb A. Lightman, published in American Cinematographer, March 1976, issue: Alcott: "The objective was to shoot these scenes exclusively by candlelight — that is, without a boost from any artificial light whatsoever. As I mentioned earlier, Stanley Kubrick and I had been discussing this possibility for years, but had not been able to find sufficiently fast lenses to do it. Stanley finally discovered three 50mm t/0.7 Zeiss still-camera lenses which were left over from a batch made for use by NASA in their Apollo moon-landing program. We had a non-reflexed Mitchell BNC which was sent over to Ed DiGiulio to be reconstructed to accept this ultra-fast lens. He had to mill out the existing lens mounts, because the rear element of this t/0.7 lens was virtually something like 4mm from the film plane. It took quite a while, and when we got the camera back we made quite extensive tests on it. The Zeiss lens was like no other lens in a way, because when you look through any normal type of lens, like the Panavision T/1.1 or the Angenieux f/0.95, you are looking through the optical system and by just altering the focus you can tell whether it’s in or out of focus. But when you looked through this lens it appeared to have fantastic range of focus, quite unbelievable. However, when you did a photographic test you discovered that it had no depth at all — which one expected anyway. So we literally had to scale this lens by doing hand tests from about 200 feet down to about 4 feet, marking every distance that would lead up to the 10-foot range. We had to literally get it down to inches on the actual scaling." American Cinematographer: "You say that the focal length was 50mm?" Alcott: "It was 50mm, but then we acquired a projection lens of the reduction type, which Ed DiGiulio fitted over another 50mm lens to give us a 36.5mm lens for a wider-angle coverage. The original 50mm lens was used for virtually all the medium shots and close shots." American Cinematographer: "And those scenes were illuminated entirely by candlelight?" Alcott: "Entirely by the candles. In the sequence were Lord Ludd and Barry are in the gaming room and he loses a large amount of money, the set was lit entirely by the candles, but I had metal reflectors made to mount above the two chandeliers, the main purpose being to keep the heat of the candles from damaging the ceiling. However, it also acted as a light reflector to provide an overall illumination of toplight."
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Wade 왜드@WadeThruRivers·
there may be worse films in terms of budget, poor acting skills, etc. but this is a film with the entire arm of Disney behind it, and all they could do is asked to be acknowledged by the larger design. Not to mention some of the worst CGI & set design i’ve ever seen.
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Boots, 'with the fur'
Boots, 'with the fur'@afraidofwasps·
(referring to Letterboxd) Are you on the Box? (referring to your letterboxd handle) Lemme get your Box bro
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NBA Youngbob Official
NBA Youngbob Official@bust_bob·
No Country for Chopped Unc
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No Other Choice
No Other Choice@noother_choice·
From master filmmaker Park Chan-wook, NO OTHER CHOICE. Starring Lee Byung Hun and Son Yejin. In Select Theaters Christmas. Everywhere January.
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Cinema Joy
Cinema Joy@CinemaJoys·
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
Cinema Joy tweet mediaCinema Joy tweet mediaCinema Joy tweet mediaCinema Joy tweet media
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