Michael Sobczak

14.1K posts

Michael Sobczak

Michael Sobczak

@msobczak

Computer hackery of the highest order. Sometimes https://t.co/xA9KD989x8

Livonia, MI Katılım Ağustos 2008
317 Takip Edilen114 Takipçiler
Michael Sobczak
Michael Sobczak@msobczak·
@CarterNixon I thought the first one was fine. Didn’t get the hate. Haven’t seen the next two, though.
English
1
0
0
41
CarterNixon
CarterNixon@CarterNixon·
Renny Harlin’s The Strangers trilogy is so bizarre. How anyone was convinced to spend millions on making these is very funny to me. I love them. 🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿
English
4
1
27
2.1K
Immortal Mustang™
Immortal Mustang™@TheAnonImmortal·
Only 8 more followers left in reaching 300 followers #smokefleets we can definitely pull this off 🔥 I will follow every single fleet 🏎️🚙🚓🚗🚕💨💨💨💨💨💨💨💨
English
18
66
203
2.4K
David Poland
David Poland@DavidPoland·
Is there any Oscar fool’s gold foolier than James Gray movies?
English
8
1
13
2.4K
cob
cob@sillierdeadite·
so we’re all in agreement that she deserves an oscar right
cob tweet mediacob tweet mediacob tweet mediacob tweet media
English
144
1.5K
13.9K
390.9K
Michael Sobczak
Michael Sobczak@msobczak·
@AdriCaporusso Really? It stars Garfield and is directed by Greengrass. I haven’t seen it obviously, but seems to have the credentials to be in the conversation unless it’s terrible.
English
1
0
0
431
Adriano InfinityVision Caporusso
The Supporting Actress race isn’t THAT stacked, at least from my perspective, Inde Navarrette can EASILY squeeze in there. It would be dumb if she missed
English
34
10
535
139.5K
Adriano InfinityVision Caporusso
@msobczak The only one I think actually is a picture movie is Sense and Sensibility or Werwulf. I think there’s no way Sensibility lands and Werwulf could just be techs, they can squeeze an Inde push
English
1
0
5
3.5K
Alex Imas
Alex Imas@alexolegimas·
Detroit is one of my favorite places to visit in the states. Yes, everything Patrick says is true, the history and architecture are awesome. The art museum and Motown museums are gems. But also for one of the best living art scenes. You can see incredible electronic music, then a killer punk/post punk show in a tiny venue (protomartyr are hometown heroes). Then take shots and 4 dollar beers with the band. End the night with a coney (or 3). Amazing artist run galleries and art spaces everywhere, in lofts and warehouses. If you like art/music/history/fun, highly recommended.
Patrick Collison@patrickc

Detroit impressions: • The downtown is full of beautiful buildings. All of them seem to have been built specifically in the 1920s. I guess that is after the city had accumulated enough auto wealth but before the twin hits of Modernism and the Depression. (I hadn't known that the GM Renaissance Center, built as a revitalization project, was at the time the largest private development in US history, and also at the time the world's tallest hotel. It may be large, but it is not pretty.) The downtown is surprisingly depopulated -- both the streets and the sidewalks feel empty. That said, it didn't feel at all unsafe. There are lots of great homes in the suburbs. • The Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation is amazing, and it's worth visiting Detroit for it alone. Among many (many) other things, it contains the oldest known surviving steam engine in the world, the actual Montgomery bus on which Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat, a deconstructed Model T, a deconstructed Eames Chair, and many great cars, agricultural equipment, locomotives, industrial specimens, and more. (They have the Lincoln Continental that JFK was riding in when assassinated -- which, apparently, was returned to service and used by several subsequent presidents.) • The museum made me wonder why American car design peaked in the mid-60s. (This fact is very evident at the museum.) The LLMs blame the 1966 National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act. (Not quite wtfhappenedin1971.com, but close.) • Good food exists but it is hard to find. • The Heidelberg Project also exists and is unique. • We stayed at the Dearborn Inn, which is wonderful, and contains cottages modeled after the homes of significant American figures. Dearborn (and Hamtramck) are now predominantly Muslim, apparently for reasons that go back a century to Henry Ford's $5 wage. Dearborn felt noticeably prosperous (we stopped for coffee at a fancy Japanese cheesecake cafe); Hamtramck did not. • Michigan.gov says that the Hispanic population of Michigan is just 6%. Coming from California, the absence is very striking. • The Detroit Institute of Arts is remarkable, particularly the room with the American landscapes and the section with the Dutch masters (especially The Visitation). An obvious question is why there is nothing quite like it in the Bay Area given how much richer the latter is than Detroit ever was -- we techies are just so uncultured by comparison. The Diego Rivera murals are amazing (and quite strange; you can see why they were controversial). • Detroit is full of historic plaques -- they are truly everywhere. This is presumably due in part to the fact that Detroit has a lot of history, but it still has many more than places with comparable historical depth. Some research suggests that it might be related to generous tax credits for historic preservation. Whether or not that is true, Detroit persuades me that other places should engage in more plaquemaxxing. • I recommend a visit! You overall leave with some sense for how exciting America must have felt in the early 20th century.

English
21
37
493
83K
Michael Sobczak
Michael Sobczak@msobczak·
Neither Pizza Hut or Domino’s are good. One has nostalgia, the other tech. Eat better pizza, folks.
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta

Pizza Hut corporate spent seven years killing the exact thing this guy is bringing back. And his stores are now some of the busiest in the entire chain. Tim Sparks, President of Daland Corporation, is converting 80 Pizza Hut locations to the original 1980s format. Red cups. Salad bars. Stained glass lamps. Pac-Man machines. Vinyl booths. His first job was as a Pizza Hut dishwasher. The Classics are massively outperforming standard Pizza Huts. Customers drive two to three hours to eat there. A single Facebook post about one Classic location in Pennsylvania got 7,500 shares and broke onto TikTok overnight. Meanwhile, corporate is doing the exact opposite. 250 store closures planned for first half of 2026. "Red Roof" dine-in franchises no longer offered to new operators. Yum Brands is considering selling the entire chain. No obvious buyer. The decline numbers are brutal. Pizza Hut held 25% of U.S. pizza market share in 1995. Today: under 14%. In 2019, half of traditional stores were still dine-in, but 90% of revenue came from off-premises orders. Corporate saw the mismatch and decided to eliminate the dine-in format entirely. Convert everything to delivery boxes. Compete with Domino's on logistics. The problem with that strategy: Domino's is a technology company that happens to sell pizza. Their competitive advantage is order tracking, delivery optimization, and franchise efficiency. When Pizza Hut stripped out the booths, the salad bar, the lamps, and the experience, they became a worse Domino's. A typical Pizza Hut location now generates 20% less revenue than the average across the other four major pizza chains. Their biggest franchisee went bankrupt in 2020 and closed 300 stores. Total sales haven't grown since 2004. Twenty-two years of stagnation. And a former dishwasher is adding salad bars and Pac-Man machines, and people are driving across state lines. The Friday night with your family in a vinyl booth under a stained glass lamp while the kids played arcade games and loaded up plates at the salad bar. That was always what Pizza Hut was selling. Corporate optimized it off the balance sheet. One franchisee who grew up inside the original version understood what the spreadsheet couldn't measure.

English
0
0
0
19
Michael Sobczak
Michael Sobczak@msobczak·
Only an outsider would reference Dearborn as being part of Detroit.
Patrick Collison@patrickc

Detroit impressions: • The downtown is full of beautiful buildings. All of them seem to have been built specifically in the 1920s. I guess that is after the city had accumulated enough auto wealth but before the twin hits of Modernism and the Depression. (I hadn't known that the GM Renaissance Center, built as a revitalization project, was at the time the largest private development in US history, and also at the time the world's tallest hotel. It may be large, but it is not pretty.) The downtown is surprisingly depopulated -- both the streets and the sidewalks feel empty. That said, it didn't feel at all unsafe. There are lots of great homes in the suburbs. • The Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation is amazing, and it's worth visiting Detroit for it alone. Among many (many) other things, it contains the oldest known surviving steam engine in the world, the actual Montgomery bus on which Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat, a deconstructed Model T, a deconstructed Eames Chair, and many great cars, agricultural equipment, locomotives, industrial specimens, and more. (They have the Lincoln Continental that JFK was riding in when assassinated -- which, apparently, was returned to service and used by several subsequent presidents.) • The museum made me wonder why American car design peaked in the mid-60s. (This fact is very evident at the museum.) The LLMs blame the 1966 National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act. (Not quite wtfhappenedin1971.com, but close.) • Good food exists but it is hard to find. • The Heidelberg Project also exists and is unique. • We stayed at the Dearborn Inn, which is wonderful, and contains cottages modeled after the homes of significant American figures. Dearborn (and Hamtramck) are now predominantly Muslim, apparently for reasons that go back a century to Henry Ford's $5 wage. Dearborn felt noticeably prosperous (we stopped for coffee at a fancy Japanese cheesecake cafe); Hamtramck did not. • Michigan.gov says that the Hispanic population of Michigan is just 6%. Coming from California, the absence is very striking. • The Detroit Institute of Arts is remarkable, particularly the room with the American landscapes and the section with the Dutch masters (especially The Visitation). An obvious question is why there is nothing quite like it in the Bay Area given how much richer the latter is than Detroit ever was -- we techies are just so uncultured by comparison. The Diego Rivera murals are amazing (and quite strange; you can see why they were controversial). • Detroit is full of historic plaques -- they are truly everywhere. This is presumably due in part to the fact that Detroit has a lot of history, but it still has many more than places with comparable historical depth. Some research suggests that it might be related to generous tax credits for historic preservation. Whether or not that is true, Detroit persuades me that other places should engage in more plaquemaxxing. • I recommend a visit! You overall leave with some sense for how exciting America must have felt in the early 20th century.

English
0
0
0
22
Michael Sobczak
Michael Sobczak@msobczak·
@Variety She’s right, but the movie is also about Tar being cancelled as a result of her various abuses.
English
0
0
1
117
Variety
Variety@Variety·
Cate Blanchett says "art is about asking provocative questions" and "Tar" is not about cancel culture. "It's not. I always though it was a meditation on power." #Cannes
English
13
52
341
18.2K
Luiz Fernando
Luiz Fernando@Luiz_Fernando_J·
#NEON keeps their winning streak at US #BoxOffice. #DamianMcCarthy’s horror #HOKUM starring #AdamScott grossed 1.3M on 3rd 3-day weekend despite losing harsh 700 theatres, now playing over only 1.195 theatres, a -60.6% drop from last weekend despite Blockbuster-palooza going on & #Obsession going strong! It hits a 15.4M cume in just 17 days, and by TUE it’ll beat #Immaculate’s 15.7M run as #8 highest grossing film ever released by #NEON in the U.S. Eyeing a 18M run in the U.S.
Luiz Fernando tweet media
English
4
16
139
6.8K
HalmanZ
HalmanZ@AlphOmegaDom·
@Noodlebrokeback @JosephKahn And without them the entire industry will eventually collapse and you won’t have any movies of any kind. How the hell did we get to a place where $15 mil is a “huge success” for a major studio movie opening in MAY??
English
3
0
7
6.7K
Joseph Kahn
Joseph Kahn@JosephKahn·
Was planning to go to the theater but here's no major movie opening this weekend. Everyone's asleep at the wheel. Hollywood used to open bangers in May.
Joseph Kahn tweet media
English
92
9
160
107K
🥃Donald Clarke📽️
🥃Donald Clarke📽️@DonaldClarke63·
Once again. Worth noting the “tradition” of timing and ranking Cannes (and Venice) standing ovations is of extremely recent origin. Within the last six years I’d argue.
English
4
1
17
2.8K
Michael Sobczak
Michael Sobczak@msobczak·
@Variety Variety takes a brief moment to report on something besides standing-O times.
English
0
0
0
327
Variety
Variety@Variety·
Javier Bardem speaks out in #Cannes on toxic masculinity: "That problem also goes to Trump, Putin and Netanyahu... the big balls man saying 'my cock is bigger than yours and I'm going to bomb the shit out of you' is a f*cking male toxic behavior that is creating thousands of dead people." variety.com/2026/film/fest…
English
2.1K
5.8K
32K
1.8M