cinematic, classic, circus, beautiful
Saturday, 11 March 2023
Jared Halley - "Pirates Of the Caribbean (He's a Pirate)" a capella
bloody fucking amazing
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPLVszsHANo
Teddie Films (ft Israel Curtis, Ryan Richardson) - "The Star Wars that I Used To Know"
amazing joke on the Gotye song
Half Life / Half Life 2 story telling
https://www.rockpapershotgun.com/the-narrative-had-to-be-baked-into-the-corridors-marc-laidlaw-on-writing-half-life
he was a rationalist rather than a populist - oppressing with appeals to reason, not emotion.
(this is not directly important to the story or the game or the article but the sentence itself is amazing)
[Marc] Laidlaw had the dev team explain the stories they were trying to tell, and helped them solve narrative problems through level design. “Lots of traps and detours and obstacles and occasional moments of breakthrough,” he says. “Really good level design tells its own story. You don’t need NPCs popping up to tell you what to do if your visual grammar is clear enough. Then when characters do pop up, they can say lines of dialogue that make them feel like characters instead of signposts.”
Wednesday, 8 March 2023
Monday, 6 March 2023
words with no English equivalent
the Danish word hygge. It means the comfortable, secure, and enjoyable feeling of a space, a gathering, an event. “Last night was so hyggelig”, or “your house is hyygglig”. I love it. Snuggly
Mono no aware - Japanese. Untranslatable, but roughly: wistful melancholy at the realization that living is ephemeral (over too soon).
Saudade - Portuguese. Also untranslatable but, approximately: The sadness of deep longing for one’s true homeland.
Կարոտ (karot / garod) — the state of longing for a place, time, person/s, interactions, events or even things, usually one’s home, homeland, loved ones. Similar to saudade but even more complex
The word "yalla" in Lebanese dialect has many meanings depending on its context. Could mean "I'm coming" or "hurry up", can be used to cheer someone on, or even be like a verbal "shrug".
Irish: craic. Example usage: "The craic was great". Meaning: you enjoyed yourself / had a fun time / were entertained and laughed a lot / had good chats / in good company. Can also mean news or gossip, i.e "What's the craic?" = "Any news?"
the Hungarian hiányérzet, which is the feeling that some unnamed, unknown thing that you can't quite put your finger on is missing.
Indonesian.
Kami = refers to a group of people that includes the speaker but not the person being spoken to.
Kita = refers to a group of people that includes the speaker & the person being spoken to.
in English, both words are simply referred to as "we".
Arabic: soubhiyé. That quiet time when you’re the only one awake in the house and can enjoy a cup of coffee before the day starts
I love 'sobremesa' in Spanish, which describes that chill time around the table with those you love - normally after you've finished eating, and you're just chatting and connecting
My favourite is the Japanese "Tsujigiri", the term for trying out your newly acquired sword by decapitating a random passer-by...
the Japanese word tsundoku (積ん読), meaning acquiring books and letting them pile up without reading them.
My grandfather would say the Finnish word "sisu." Loosely translated, "stoic determination, tenacity of purpose, grit, bravery, resilience and hardiness," but it's hard to describe in English. You might hate doing a thing, but the thing has to be done, so you will do the thing.
Flotsam, jetsam, lagan, derelict
Flotsam - cargo that fell overboard
Jetsam - cargo jettisoned overboard intentionally
Lagan - cargo at the bottom of the sea, still retrievable
Derelict - cargo at the bottom of the sea, irretrievable
Sunday, 5 March 2023
Bones and All
Fun quiet cannibal roadtrip where a young girl finds out her cannibal background (and that of her mum, who ate her own hands) and goes on a roadtrip with a fellow "eater"
Twice or so interesting edit with quick "zoom" shots.