Every post on my cohost feed is insightful, lengthy, and full of very cool information.
We gotta' start talking about depressed warcrimes barbie wives organically on cohost.

avatar by @citriccenobite
you can say "chimoora" instead of "cow of tailed snake" if you want. its a good pun.
i ramble about aerospace sometimes
I take rocket photos and you can see them @aWildLupi
I have a terminal case of bovine pungiform encephalopathy, the bovine puns are cowmpulsory
they/them/moo where "moo" stands in for "you" or where it's funny, like "how are moo today, Lupi?" or "dancing with mooself"
Every post on my cohost feed is insightful, lengthy, and full of very cool information.
We gotta' start talking about depressed warcrimes barbie wives organically on cohost.
we don't go to movies these days; mostly we watch older stuff, and newer movies trickle into the queue eventually. so the Barbie / Oppenheimer fight mostly doesn't interest us, but all the same—it is very difficult to believe that a edgy nerdbro like Christopher Nolan can possibly have anything useful to say about Oppenheimer, beyond the customary (and grotesque) nerdbro worship of The Bomb™ as if it were some pinnacle of human achievement. give me the Barbie movie any day over nerdwank about The Bomb™. ~Chara
Y'know, I am not the world's biggest Chris Nolan fan. I didn't see either Tenet or Intersteller and while I am not avoiding them out of any moral stance I also don't feel the need to actively seek them out. However, I feel like Nolan has a certain philosophy to his filmmaking that is waning in the current cultural moment: one that studio filmmaking should be an avenue for exploring sociatal feelings regarding moral positions as opposed to simply providing entertainment. I expect Oppenheimer to be more like The Wind Rises in terms of it's lesson: the pleasures that come with discovery also carry with them the costs of the world. Strangely I think Gerwig also explores a similar place in her work, from a different angle.
I hope you're correct about Oppenheimer—I mean, I hope the movie's actually got some substance to it. but I'm worried that it'll end up being an amplification of the standard U.S. self-justifications about the militarization of the atom. I guess we shall see! (eventually.) ~Chara