if you combined the songwriting from the second half of that movie with the screenwriting from the first half of that movie you'd really have something

member of @staff, lapsed linguist and drummer, electronics hobbyist
zip's bf
no supervisor but ludd means the threads any good
if you combined the songwriting from the second half of that movie with the screenwriting from the first half of that movie you'd really have something
my first instinct was "shameless attempt to do the absolute minimum theatrical run to get oscar nominations" and turns out! yep!
- All eligible motion pictures, unless otherwise noted (see Paragraph 9, below), must be: [...]
c. for paid admission in a commercial motion picture theater in one of the six qualifying U.S. metro areas: Los Angeles County; City of New York [five boroughs]; the Bay Area [counties of San Francisco, Marin, Alameda, San Mateo and Contra Costa]; Chicago [Cook County, Illinois]; Miami [Miami-Dade County, Florida]; and Atlanta [Fulton County, Georgia],
d. for a theatrical qualifying run of at least seven consecutive days in the same commercial motion picture theater, during which period screenings must occur at least three times daily, with at least one screening beginning between 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. daily,
e. advertised and exploited during their theatrical qualifying run in a manner normal and customary to theatrical feature distribution practices, [...]- Films that, in any version, receive their first public exhibition or distribution in any manner other than as a theatrical motion picture release will not be eligible for Academy Awards in any category. Nontheatrical public exhibition or distribution includes but is not limited to: [...]
• Internet transmission
Motion pictures released in such nontheatrical media on or after the first day of their theatrical qualifying run remain eligible. Also, up to fifteen percent of the running time of a film may be shown in a nontheatrical medium prior to the film’s qualifying run. (See also Paragraph 10 below.)
https://www.oscars.org/sites/oscars/files/95th_oscars_complete_rules.pdf
For as long as I can remember, maps.google.com was the defacto domain for Google Maps. Also for as long as I can remember, I allowed this domain to use the location services of my browser.
Yesterday I was asked to allow the usage of location services for Google Maps seemingly out of nowhere. Of course I accepted. After all, I just wanted to check a route to a local business and I was in a hurry. Back home I opened Google Maps again, and noticed that maps.google.com now redirects to google.com/maps. This implies that the permissions I give to Google Maps now apply to all of Googles services hosted under this domain. So far I only identified Google Flights to have made the same switch (google.com/flights), though I'm sure they're just beginning to transfer their services to the main google.com domain.
Congratulations, you now have permission to geo-track me across all of your services.
Smart move, Google.