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Foster

@foster_type

Principal at Roderigue Hortalez & Co. Multi award-winning chili chef.

เข้าร่วม Aralık 2009
1.7K กำลังติดตาม20.2K ผู้ติดตาม
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Foster
Foster@foster_type·
Does the larval, pulsating 2026 feel more like 2016 or 2020? Either way, feels like something is about to hatch and slither!
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Foster@foster_type·
That's incredible, how did they simulate gravity?
Anish Moonka@AnishA_Moonka

You're watching a $248 million film and not a single green or blue screen was used. The alien is a handmade puppet. The cockpit physically rotates to simulate gravity. I looked at the production tech behind this 95% score, and the engineering is wild. Phil Lord and Chris Miller, directing their first live-action movie in 12 years, built the entire Hail Mary spacecraft as a real set at Shepperton Studios in England. Not a miniature. Not a digital model. A full-size ship interior you can walk through. Production designer Charlie Wood studied the International Space Station, Russia's Mir station, and the Boeing 747 cockpit to get the look right. He deliberately made the panels mismatched, because real spacecraft are assembled from parts made by different companies. Nothing matches perfectly. That's what makes it feel real. The cockpit is only about 8 feet wide. It sits on a mechanical platform that can tilt, spin, and shake, so when the ship changes direction or enters different gravity conditions, the whole set moves. Chairs end up on walls. Ladders flip direction. Gosling was suspended inside a spinning ring so he could float and move through the ship for real, reacting to actual hardware around him. No guessing where a wall might be added later. Then there's Rocky. He's the alien co-lead, and he's not CGI. Neal Scanlan, the creature designer who built the Porgs for Star Wars, spent a full year on this character. Over 300 designs before they landed on the final look. Rocky is a thin, hollow shell, 3D-printed from a digital sculpture, then hand-painted in see-through layers so light passes through him like skin. His arms pop off and swap out depending on the scene: one set has a closed fist for walking, another has tiny motorized fingers strong enough to pick up objects. Five puppeteers (nicknamed the "Rockyteers") operated him in every scene. James Ortiz, an award-winning puppet designer from New York theater, voiced Rocky and controlled him on set. When Scanlan met him, he told Ortiz, "You're Frank Oz, and I'm making Yoda for you." Every reaction Gosling gives to the alien is to something physically in front of him. Greig Fraser, who won the Oscar for shooting Dune, filmed the space scenes in the larger IMAX format (that taller image you see in IMAX theaters) and the Earth flashbacks in regular widescreen. Then the team did something unusual: they took the digital footage and printed it onto real film strips, twice, using two different types of film stock. Then they scanned those strips back into digital. It sounds redundant, but it adds a texture and warmth that you can only get from physical film. Fraser used the same technique on Dune and The Batman. Drew Goddard spent six years writing this screenplay. His last adaptation of Andy Weir's novel, The Martian, earned him an Oscar nomination. He described the challenge this way: a screenplay gets about 5% of a novel's word count. The lead is alone for most of the runtime. When he finally gets a co-star, that co-star doesn't speak English, communicates through sounds closer to whale song, and has no face. Goddard called it a screenwriter's nightmare, then said that difficulty was the whole point. He and the directors fought studio pushback to keep Weir's original ending intact. 95% from 212 critics. 98% from over 2,500 audience ratings. And the lead isn't a superhero, a cop, or a soldier. He's just an ordinary middle school science teacher.

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Foster@foster_type·
Sohrab's moon is in the seventh house and Jupiter aligns with Mars, so now it can be told.
Edward Feser@FeserEdward

From @SohrabAhmari: “Trump…has now fully given way to his liberal caricature: venal, erratic, childish, a chaos agent…The scale of [his] failures...return[s us] to the character problem that first gave rise to the Never Trump movement” unherd.com/2026/03/trump-… via @UnHerd

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Douglas A. Boneparth
Douglas A. Boneparth@dougboneparth·
March Madness has come a long way…
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Foster@foster_type·
@michaelbd the point is that there are way more nuts to pick from! But I agree that, even if that's true, it doesn't make nut-picking itself productive.
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Michael Brendan Dougherty
@foster_type Yeah, I’m not out here repeating everything every critic of the war is saying either. But I’m not going to let one side take the privilege of nut and fruit picking.
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Foster@foster_type·
It must frustrate the few earnest "restrainers" to be surrounded by maniacal mountebanks and evil retards.
Nathan Livingstone (MilkBarTV)@TheMilkBarTV

🚨 Tucker Carlson disgustingly defends 1930s British fascist Oswald Mosley - who was so aligned with the Nazis that he married at Joseph Goebbels’ house in Berlin, with Adolf Hitler as a guest - even calling him “patriotic.” Carlson claimed Mosley’s “only crime was being the opposition” to Churchill, and that this is why he was arrested during World War II. To be clear: Mosley was a full-blown fascist. He received financial support from Mussolini, maintained close ties to Nazi Germany, and led the British Union of Fascists’ Blackshirts - a paramilitary-style group inspired by Mussolini’s movement, known for violence and for targeting Jewish communities. Mosley had previously served as a Member of Parliament from 1918 to 1931, initially as a Conservative and later as a Labour MP. However, after founding the British Union of Fascists in 1932 and embracing fascism, he was never again electorally viable or close to holding office. He was detained in 1940 under Defence Regulation 18B because the British government considered him a security risk with sympathies toward enemy powers - not because he was a credible political opponent. For Carlson to portray Mosley - an outspoken, Hitler-admiring fascist - as a war hero (which Tucker exaggerates), and to claim he was persecuted purely for political reasons, is deeply disturbing. The question has to be asked: does Tucker Carlson despise Churchill so much that he’s willing to defend a Nazi-aligned fascist like Mosley - or does he genuinely believe a Nazi-aligned fascist like Mosley was a patriot? Feat. @SimonWhistler

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Foster@foster_type·
@michaelbd I'll give you Loomer though I don't consider myself to be in any school or camp with either of them.
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Foster@foster_type·
When I Say Talarico isn't a real person I mean he lacks interiority. He's a @pmarca dreamboat, a philosophical zombie who doesn't experience qualia. There's nothing it's "like" to be him. He's a spiritually inert drone who hasn't had a firmware update since the vibe shift. Hope that helps.
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Foster
Foster@foster_type·
One of the reasons David French's column hit so off-key is because Talarico doesn't pass a Voight-Kampff Test. He's not a real human being, let alone a "decent" one. You can't watch video of him and think he's an actual dude.
Western Lensman@WesternLensman

Talarico, 2022: Reducing meat consumption is a moral imperative and existential to save the planet. Talarico Campaign Response: Look at our guy immorally wolfing down all that meat while k*lling the planet. This is representative of what the entire campaign will be: Attempting to construct an image that is at odds with the his past positions and rhetoric.

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Foster@foster_type·
@skidz7 @charlescwcooke are you also a replicant because it's the kind of thing a replicant would say
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Foster@foster_type·
I'm seeing a lot of my friends take this position but I think three things: 1) it's revisionist and an attempt to resolve cognitive dissonance over one of the most inexplicably bad things the administration has ever done. 2) it's a canard to say "the invasion threat wasn't serious, therefore this is a non-issue." The threat was a huge issue whether it was credible or not. 3) Denmark was absolutely right to take it seriously regardless, and their moves to that effect helped force the administration to back down, not out of fear of losing an armed confrontation, but by forcing key contingents who were quietly tolerating Trump's antics to get serious about pushing back
Fusilli Spock@awstar11

This is unintentionally hilarious

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Foster@foster_type·
@EggerDC just be thankful I'm not canceling them
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Foster@foster_type·
Damn it I had Siena winning it all.
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Foster@foster_type·
You’ve been with the professors And they’ve all liked your looks With great lawyers you have Discussed lepers and crooks You’ve been through all of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s books You’re very well read It’s well known Because something is happening here But you don’t know what it is Do you, Mister Jones?
Aelfred The Great@aelfred_D

1. Jewish 2. From the Midwest 3. Took a non-Jewish sounding name 4. Hobnobbed with the elite but was never one of them 5. Used his outsider status to both thrill and critique that same elite Jay Gatsby is Bob Dylan

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Foster@foster_type·
The "Hi, Art of the Deal Enjoyer here" responses are an example of outsourcing your thinking to a talking point. There are literally Japanese soldiers living in caves on small Pacific atolls who understand Trump's "negotiating style". The entire planet understands it. It does precisely zero to address the merits of a particular instance of it.
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Foster@foster_type·
misses the point entirely. Everyone knows what the ghostwriter of ART OF THE DEAL said. And it's routinely used as a way to avoid talking about the merits or effectiveness of particular Trump threats. As I said, it doesn't matter if Trump's threat against Greenland was credible. It matters that he made it.
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CriticalZaku
CriticalZaku@CriticalZaku·
@awstar11 @foster_type He literally wrote a book on his negotiation style and using hyperbolic positions and anchoring to extract better deals from people. We’re 6 years into this. How can people still be surprised when he does it.
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Kite & Key Media
Kite & Key Media@kiteandkeymedia·
Almost nobody understands how American taxes actually work. Even the IRS admits it doesn't know how long the tax code is. And that confusion isn't just annoying — it's the single best weapon politicians have to mislead you. Our new video separates fact from fiction.
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