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10 votes
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Eight marvelous and melancholy things I've learned about creativity
6 votes -
The quarantine playlist - A list of film recommendations about social distancing
6 votes -
Five people who were amazingly productive in quarantine
9 votes -
Sixteen things that software testers wished they’d learned earlier
5 votes -
Here’s a list of authors whose tours have been canceled due to coronavirus, if you’d like to support them by buying books
11 votes -
Eight things toxic mothers have in common
10 votes -
A (comically late) Black History Month Watchlist
Yeah, so I know there's about a week and a half left in Black History Month (which is in February here, for the non-US and I believe Canada folks who didn't know), and this rec list is therefore...
Yeah, so I know there's about a week and a half left in Black History Month (which is in February here, for the non-US and I believe Canada folks who didn't know), and this rec list is therefore super late, but I've been watching some movies that were historically significant in terms of breaking racial barriers at mainstream award shows like the Oscars and in film production at large, were pioneers in getting films from African nations famous and acclaimed worldwide, or just generally covered racial issues of their times in significant or compelling ways, and thought I'd post the watchlist here in case anyone was interested. So I guess either binge all these in the coming week and a half, keep this as a guide for next year, watch any of the ones that interest you past February, or save it for October, which is when I understand Black History Month takes place in the UK.
- Within Our Gates (1920) - The first movie by an African American director to have a still surviving print.
- Eleven P.M. (1928) - A silent era film led by a mostly black cast and directed by enigmatic little known African American director Richard Maurice. An absolutely bizarre surrealist melodrama.
- Cry, The Beloved Country (1951) - This film examining the effects of apartheid in South Africa actually filmed almost entirely in segregated South Africa, possibly making it the first major film to do so.
- The Defiant Ones (1958) - Sidney Poitier was the first black man to be nominated for Best Actor at the Oscars for his role in this film. Details the story of two escaped convicts, a white man and a black man, becoming friends, with more nuance and layering than its premise and time period might suggest.
- One Potato, Two Potato (1964) - One of the first, and possibly the first, films to deal with interracial marriage in a serious manner. Predates Guess Who's Coming to Dinner by 3 years.
- Nothing But a Man (1964) - Realistic depiction of life in a racist society, consisting of a constant soul-crushing barrage of minor aggressions instead of huge explosions of hate. Selected for preservation in the Library of Congress and considered to be an important example of neorealism.
- Black Girl (1966) - One of the first African films by an African filmmaker to receive international attention and acclaim. Shows the lasting damage and effects of colonialism both in the colonized country and the lives of those displaced as a result of it.
- In the Heat of the Night (1967) - Tackled racial tensions in the South in the midst of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. Selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress.
- Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967) - One of the few films of the time depicting interracial marriage in a positive light and a serious way. Selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress.
- Black Panthers (1968) - Documents a small but significant moment in the history of the fight against racism in the US, the Free Huey movement championed by the Black Panthers.
- Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song (1971) - Considered an important film in the history of African American cinema, and credited as one of the pioneers of the blaxploitation genre.
- She's Gotta Have It (1986) - The debut film of famed director Spike Lee, an ahead of its time depiction of polyamory and female independence, it showed Brooklyn's black community in a light that drew media attention and focus to its artists and musicians following its release.
- Daughters of the Dust (1991) - The first by an African American woman to gain a general theatrical release (in 1991!). Selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress.
- Malcolm X (1992) - A biopic of civil rights leader Malcolm X, also directed by Spike Lee. Selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress.
- Girlhood (2014) - The film discusses and challenges conceptions of race, gender and class; Sciamma's goal was to capture the stories of black teenagers, characters she claims are generally underdeveloped in French films.
- Moonlight (2016) - Barry Jenkins' meditation on black sense of masculinity and the struggles of LGBT members in the contemporary American black community became the first film with an all-black cast to win Best Picture at the Oscars.
- Get Out (2017) - With this film exploring the exploitative horror of the modern white liberal brand of racism, Jordan Peele became the first black writer to win the Best Original Screenplay category at the Oscars, as well as the first to earn a Best Director nomination and a Best Picture nomination for a debut film.
- The Last Black Man in San Francisco (2019) - A film that explores the gentrification of San Francisco and the struggles in personal identity that arise from it.
I'd love to hear any feedback on the list or if you're gonna watch anything from it, and suggestions for any movies to add to it, especially between the 20s and 50s and the 90s and 00s, since those are especially massive gaps in my knowledge.
8 votes -
Five cheap(ish) things to make the perfect cup of coffee
14 votes -
Ten of Europe’s most scenic train journeys
8 votes -
International alternatives...
I've recently realised I read a lot of American literature. I'd like to broaden my horizons so I'm wondering for fun if anyone out there can suggest an international (i.e non-US) counterpart for...
I've recently realised I read a lot of American literature. I'd like to broaden my horizons so I'm wondering for fun if anyone out there can suggest an international (i.e non-US) counterpart for any of the following or just general non-US recommendations?
- Denis Johnson
- David Foster Wallace
- Flannery O'Conner
- Carson McCullers
8 votes -
Five top designers imagine the workplace of 2040
5 votes -
Ed Edd n Eddy power level tier list
4 votes -
Which tech company is really the most evil?
8 votes -
The New York Public Library has calculated its most checked-out books of all time
20 votes -
Sandman to Hark! A Vagrant: The best comics of the decade
9 votes -
The Verge’s gadgets of the decade
14 votes -
The twenty travel trends we predict for 2020
4 votes -
A guide to Chinese post-rock
7 votes -
Spotify Wrapped 2019 is out! What were your top artists?
15 votes -
GQ has selected their favorite books of 2019, and asked each book's author to make their own recommendation
5 votes -
Seven security strategies, summarized
3 votes -
Ten must-read crime books set in the American West
4 votes -
Best movies set in every state
6 votes -
Five things you didn’t know GPS could do
13 votes -
Ahead of her ambitious Cornucopia tour reaching the UK in November, we select the greatest work by the Icelandic pop-polymath Björk
3 votes -
Cocktails from the 1970s
6 votes -
The fifty best video games of the 21st century
14 votes -
List of Apple Arcade games available at launch this Thursday
8 votes -
Ganesh Chaturthi 2019: Ten lesser-known short stories of Bal Ganesha you need to know
6 votes -
Ars Technica's list of the hottest new board games from Gen Con 2019
14 votes -
Eight crime writers who wrote other forms of literature, including literary novels, memoirs, and even works of history
7 votes -
Pansexuality 101: Five key facts you need to know
17 votes -
Here are the coolest science fiction weapons of all time, ranked
5 votes -
Five insights that big data has gleaned about cannabis
6 votes -
Eleven great mechanical keyboards for coders — updated for 2019
9 votes -
How to speak Silicon Valley: Fifty-three essential tech-bro terms explained
27 votes -
Language wars: The nineteen greatest linguistic spats of all time
10 votes -
Ten surprising facts about books of beasts from the European middle ages
9 votes -
Extinction risk and rebellion: Fifteen environmental books coming in June
7 votes -
A collection of notable Tildes threads!
Hello! Have a good or unique thread that you found on this website that you want others to see? Feel free to suggest some and I will update them in this list! After a thread is added, I will also...
Hello! Have a good or unique thread that you found on this website that you want others to see? Feel free to suggest some and I will update them in this list! After a thread is added, I will also sort it by category.
Here's a wiki for it like @Algernon_Asimov suggested
Here's another wiki although this isn't specifically focused on notable threads.
Here's a google document for itMeta
By making both "high-quality discussion" and "transparent community development" a core part of its identity, Tildes will always be dominated by people with "moderator/power user" personalities. - A thread discussing content elitism on tildes.
Scenario
If you found the secret to immortality would you tell anyone? - Self-explanatory title.
25 votes -
From Agatha Christie to Gillian Flynn: Fifty great thrillers by women
5 votes -
Thirty essential ideas you should know about ADHD
7 votes -
What are your top ten favorite albums this year?
Mine, in no particular order: Daughters "You Won't Get What You Want" Bosse-de-nage "Further Still" Lush "Snail Mail" Uniform "The Long Walk" Rolo Tomassi "Time Will Die and Love Will Bury It"...
Mine, in no particular order:
Daughters "You Won't Get What You Want"
Bosse-de-nage "Further Still"
Lush "Snail Mail"
Uniform "The Long Walk"
Rolo Tomassi "Time Will Die and Love Will Bury It"
Frontierer "Unloved"
Rival Consoles "Persona"
Ken Mode "Loved"
Portal "Ion"
Janelle Monáe "Dirty Computer"honorable mentions to "Twin Fantasy" by Car Seat Headrest (not really a new album), "Year of the Snitch" by Death Grips, "Ordinary Corrupt Human Love" by Deafheaven, and "Heartless" by Pallbearer.
14 votes -
Four books by Asian American authors republished as Penguin Classics
9 votes -
Nine APIs for the geekiest of programmers
7 votes -
The best hike in every US state
9 votes -
How do you find new books to read?
We all have plenty of books on our bedside table, waiting their turn. What makes you choose the ones you do?
15 votes -
Eight books that can help make you a better leader
4 votes -
Five damaging myths about video games – let’s shoot 'em up
9 votes