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9 votes
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The day job
7 votes -
Chickens are smarter than you think
18 votes -
For Severance fans: The You You Are by Dr. Ricken Lazlo Hale, PhD
23 votes -
What are your favourite time-loop based books, movies and video games?
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
I absolutely love the premise of a time-loop. I find them fascinating, and there are so many variations to explore. Inevitably, I find myself fantasizing about waking up in my own younger body and the shenanigans I would get up to with so much future knowledge (before existential dread of meeting the same people and creating the same family kick in).
- Short time-loops where someone relives the same day, or an even shorter period.
- Medium time-loops where someone can live days, weeks, months or even years before resetting - often when they die.
- Longer time-loops where someone effectively relives an entire human lifespan on repeat.
- Shared time-loops where other people are independently looping - a great source of conflict.
And plenty more besides.
I'll share some of my favourite examples in a comment, but please share your favourites and tell us why you love them.
43 votes -
Interview with economist James Galbraith about new book, economic theory, climate change, sanctions and more
3 votes -
Cynicism vs hopeful skepticism
7 votes -
ADHD representation in media
Ever since my diagnosis two years ago, I have had this as an ongoing conversation with my family. I always felt like there was very little accurate representation of ADHD in media. The few...
Ever since my diagnosis two years ago, I have had this as an ongoing conversation with my family. I always felt like there was very little accurate representation of ADHD in media. The few examples I could always think of were either very loosely coded as ADHD, or extreme stereotypes. I want to crowdsource some examples of ADHD representation in media, both good and bad.
Doug from Up: This is a common one that comes up a lot. I think it’s a really poor example. The only ADHD symptom is the squirrel joke they use a handful of times. It’s also (for my presentation at least) extremely inaccurate. Random things I see will indeed distract me, but Doug can come back from the conversation without a missed step. I think this one is extra harmful because it gives a false sense of how the ADHD brain works.
Dory from Finding Nemo: This is another common one people bring up. Dory’s intrusive and impulsive thoughts are much more accurate to my presentation, so it’s an improvement from Doug. I don’t like that she is often portrayed as stupid or careless. I’m not against a character with those traits, but with so few examples of ADHD in media, I think people may think it comes from the ADHD.
Evelyn Wang from Everything Everywhere All At Once: This example showed up recently on my Internet searches. I want to rewatch it again with the context of ADHD. I feel like it is probably a decent representation, but I can’t say for sure without a rewatch.
Percy Jackson: This is the only one on my list that is explicitly diagnosed with ADHD (and dyslexia and other issues). I will give them kudos for the explicit diagnosis, but I don’t think it’s a good representation. ADHD seems to just mean that he is bad at school. It seems that it has no impact on Percy outside of that. For my particular case, I was quite good in school, so it is inaccurate for me. I would be interested to hear if other people resonate more with it. Dyslexia seems to come up more in the books, so it may be a better representation for that.
Todd from Bojack Horsemen: I saved my personal favorite for last. I first watched Bojack Horsemen before my diagnosis, and ADHD wasn’t really on my mind. After my diagnosis, I realized how good of a portrayal Todd is. As a bonus, it is the only portrayal I have heard of that includes hyper focus (When Todd hyper focuses on writing the rock opera, and then the hyper focus switches to a video game). With the exception of the rock opera, I think I have had the same exact scenario play out in my own life. I had something I wanted to do, was able to focus on it, but was stolen away into a video game hyper focus.
Are there any other examples you have found?
30 votes -
My hobby: reviewing things! Here are my favorites games, movies, shows, books from 2024.
16 votes -
“It's the first time we have a trans person in a leading role in a feature film in Denmark. Otherwise, I wouldn't have made this movie,” the debuting director Mathias Broe tells Variety
10 votes -
When The Wind Blows: The darkest movie you haven't seen
10 votes -
English grammar book recommendations?
Hi fellow Tilder Staters, I write professionally for my job. I've picked up plenty of tips, tricks, and strategies from mentors and managers over the years. I also have an English degree focused...
Hi fellow Tilder Staters,
I write professionally for my job. I've picked up plenty of tips, tricks, and strategies from mentors and managers over the years.
I also have an English degree focused in literature.
But I've never formally studied grammar or linguistics.
Does anyone have a textbook or theory book that they could recommend in this space? I've tried to look around a bit but nothing has caught my eye, and the subject is dry enough that I don't have the time or energy to invest in one of the boring options.
9 votes -
Is there any escape from the Spotify syndrome?
25 votes -
Game Programming Patterns - State
11 votes -
Stuff I learnt in 2024
12 votes -
Dozens of sites linked to the Viking great army as it ravaged Anglo-Saxon England more than 1,000 years ago have been discovered
11 votes -
Understanding the Odin Programming Language
6 votes -
The gossip trap - How civilization came to be and how social media is ending it
23 votes -
Z-Library helps students to overcome academic poverty, study finds
38 votes -
Book review: Eric Turkheimer's "Understanding the Nature-Nurture Debate"
10 votes -
The radical optimism of David Graeber
14 votes -
This spider scientist wants us to appreciate the world's eight-legged wonders
6 votes -
Swedish photographer Lars Tunbjörk documented remarkably dreary corporate spaces – his images should remind us that it didn't have to be this way
23 votes -
There might be a secret painting hiding in that old book of yours
11 votes -
The Tech Coup: A new book shows how the unchecked power of companies is destabilizing governance
16 votes -
This journalist spent a year living with the embattled families of trans youth
18 votes -
Stephen King’s ‘Fairy Tale’ getting ten episode series adaptation from A24
8 votes -
Request: Advice on book spine repair
Does anyone here have any advice on repairing a book spine? I have a hard back that an excited puppy chewed off the outer part of the spine. Now that said puppy is well out of her "chewing on...
Does anyone here have any advice on repairing a book spine? I have a hard back that an excited puppy chewed off the outer part of the spine. Now that said puppy is well out of her "chewing on random stuff" stage I'm trying to figure out how to repair/reinforce the binding since it's otherwise a brand new book. I'm a crafty person so I'm trying to embrace the accident and treat it as a book with a bit more character.
Most of the glue is intact, so my current thought is to add additional glue (book binding glue I'd assume?) and then use a tape or fabric to reinforce the spine.
I'm not expecting a repair that looks like new. I'm looking for something functional and durable that will keep the book from falling apart with use. If there's a good tape for this application that would probably be sufficient. Just soliciting some additional feedback in case someone has done something similar before I take a stab at the project.
Here's some pictures of the book and of course puppy tax: https://postimg.cc/gallery/wyskQn1
9 votes -
The elite college students who can’t read books
57 votes -
The Monkey | Official red band teaser
5 votes -
Phil Ochs - The War Is Over (Songbook and interviews)
6 votes -
You can learn Lord of the Rings’ Elvish — just not J.R.R. Tolkien's version
26 votes -
That collective feeling - The rise and fall of New York City clubbing
7 votes -
Review: Fears of a Setting Sun, by Dennis C. Rasmussen
8 votes -
Lessons from the golden age of the mall walkers
6 votes -
Is accidentally stumbling across the unknown a key part of science?
7 votes -
Why TV is wrong for J.R.R. Tolkien
15 votes -
Review: South Africa's Brave New World, by R.W. Johnson
6 votes -
Emacs Writing Studio — A comprehensive guide for writers seeking to streamline their workflow using Emacs
8 votes -
Book review: "Escaping Gravity" by Lori Garver
7 votes -
In search of: audiobook versions of The Worst Witch series
3 votes -
If you were to recommend up to three books to read up on your niche (or any subject), what would they be?
as in the title. Be it textbooks, bios or anything else. Somewhere I've heard that a couple of books in a given subject can give you quite a good understanding of it. It does not have to be a...
as in the title. Be it textbooks, bios or anything else. Somewhere I've heard that a couple of books in a given subject can give you quite a good understanding of it.
It does not have to be a niche either; I am interested in hearing about your favourite general psychology or biotechnology books just as well; I hope we can exchange recommendations about how to dive into a given field.For me, I'd say that to get a taste of Computer Science from the metal to high level concepts, I'd go with:
- Introduction to Algorithms by Cormen et al. - for many it's bible of algorithms designs, I also enjoyed it very much (and I like to think that it was not only because of widespread aclaim)
- CODE by Petzhold - for people who like to understand every part of the system they build; it goes through the process of building a computer, starting with logic gates and ending with fully working Turing machine.
21 votes -
Scott Galloway - "The Algebra of Wealth"
15 votes -
Danecdotes: Reminiscences and Reflections Concerning a Largely Wasted Life
9 votes -
Credit at last for female screenwriter airbrushed from Hollywood history
12 votes -
Library asks users to verify that books actually exist before making a loan request because AI invents book titles
43 votes -
Superintelligence—ten years later
8 votes -
Chef cooks from 720 year old cook book
15 votes -
Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win
59 votes -
How babies and young children learn to understand language
8 votes