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19 votes
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Small farmers in Mexico keep corn’s genetic diversity alive
3 votes -
Black Mesa | Xen trailer
12 votes -
The future of aging just might be in Margaritaville
9 votes -
Cat tongue spines help smear saliva and inspire new 3D-printed brush
4 votes -
"Framed": She was the PTA mom everyone knew. Who would want to harm her?
8 votes -
New Orleans’ Tipitina’s Could Be Purchased By Local Funk Band Galactic
7 votes -
Miniman - Digital Harmonies (2018)
3 votes -
Prime Minister Scott Morrison will cut the number of migrants coming to Australia, declaring the "roads are clogged" and buses, trains and schools in Sydney and Melbourne "are full".
4 votes -
Nautilus Pompilius - Proschalnoje pismo (Farewell letter, aka “Goodbye, America!”) (1989)
4 votes -
Sackler family members face mass litigation and criminal investigations over opioids crisis
4 votes -
Italian Village Installs Speed Cameras, Records 58,000 Infractions In 2 Weeks
15 votes -
Tim Cook defends using Google as primary search engine on Apple devices
15 votes -
Desaparecidos - The Left Is Right (2015)
6 votes -
This staircase from the Eiffel Tower is for sale
10 votes -
Decrying “tribalism” is a favorite pastime of American elites, but the real problem is the unity among them
8 votes -
Canadian literary prize suspended after finalists object to Amazon sponsorship
10 votes -
Should we have a small description for why a removed comment was removed?
It would be nice to give some context to removed comments so people can see what happened without seeing the offensive comment. I never really liked it on Reddit where when a comment was removed...
It would be nice to give some context to removed comments so people can see what happened without seeing the offensive comment. I never really liked it on Reddit where when a comment was removed by a mod, you had no idea why. It would be nice for fellow curious people maybe. What are your thoughts?
37 votes -
The community network manual: How to build the Internet yourself
13 votes -
BlackBerry buys cybersecurity firm Cylance for $1.4 billion
5 votes -
APEC leaders summit: Five key moments in Pacific tug of war
6 votes -
Today is International Men's Day
30 votes -
Doctor Who S11E07 'Kerblam!' discussion thread
What did you think of this week's episode of 'Doctor Who'? Previous discussions: Doctor Who S11E06 'The Demons of the Punjab' Doctor Who S11E05 'The Tsuranga Conundrum' Doctor Who S11E04...
What did you think of this week's episode of 'Doctor Who'?
Previous discussions:
11 votes -
Sackler family members face mass litigation, criminal investigations over opioids crisis
7 votes -
Big new Indian rocket launches satellite, setting stage for Moon mission
6 votes -
Black Mirror S04E06 “Black Museum” Discussion Thread
Previous episode | Index thread Black Mirror Season 4 Episode 6 - Black Museum On a dusty stretch of highway, a traveler stumbles across a museum that boasts rare criminal artifacts -- and a...
Previous episode | Index thread
Black Mirror Season 4 Episode 6 - Black Museum
On a dusty stretch of highway, a traveler stumbles across a museum that boasts rare criminal artifacts -- and a disturbing main attraction.
Warning: this thread contains spoilers about this episode! If you haven't seen it yet, please watch it and come back to this thread later.
You can talk about past episodes, but please don't discuss future episodes in this thread!
If you don't know what to say, here are some questions to get the discussion started:
- How does the title relate to the episode itself?
- Are there any similarities between real life events and the episode?
- Are there any references or easter eggs in the episode, such as references to past episodes?
Please rate the episode here!
10 votes -
We thought the Incas couldn’t write. These knots change everything.
8 votes -
The Brexit mess could lead to a break-up of a no longer United Kingdom
15 votes -
The all-white house: Where did the trend come from and will it last?
7 votes -
Fairfax Media shareholders vote for Channel Nine merger
3 votes -
What are you thankful for?
Hello everybody! As the Americans here are probably aware, this week is our holiday for Thanksgiving. One of the traditional parts of the holiday (at least as I've always practiced it) is...
Hello everybody! As the Americans here are probably aware, this week is our holiday for Thanksgiving. One of the traditional parts of the holiday (at least as I've always practiced it) is everybody writing a list of the things they're thankful for in their life and over the past year. Especially since this is our first Thanksgiving together since Tildes was founded, I was wondering if you'd like to contribute such a list. :)
17 votes -
To slow down climate change, we need to take on capitalism
37 votes -
'That time Disney remade Beauty and the Beast' - On Disney's ongoing live action remake trend
10 votes -
In search of the real Mike Tomlin
3 votes -
Let it Grow: Seedballs Pave the Way Towards Reforestation
9 votes -
North Korea - Inside the world's most secretive state
4 votes -
Facebook investors call on Mark Zuckerberg to resign as chairman following damaging report
18 votes -
September 87 - Bad Dream Baby (2017)
3 votes -
Tildes, what are your thoughts on the "Earth Strike" movement that's currently being organized?
for those of you unaware, the "Earth Strike" movement (see also: their Reddit, Tumblr, and Twitter pages) is an international planned protest movement that will ultimately culminate in a general,...
for those of you unaware, the "Earth Strike" movement (see also: their Reddit, Tumblr, and Twitter pages) is an international planned protest movement that will ultimately culminate in a general, international strike on september 27th, 2019. as of today it's only been in planning for like a week and change (almost exclusively online, as a point of note) so a lot of kinks are still being worked out and i'm not even sure there's a centralized organization to it as of now, but among other things, it internationally seeks the following demands:
An immediate start on global co-operation to reverse the damage done to the earths’ climate, through unambiguous and binding agreements, by both world leaders and corporate entities, following IPCC projections of halving carbon net emissions by 2030 and zero net emissions by 2050;
International, unambiguous and binding commitments to halt the destruction of rain forests and other wildlife habitats, and
International, unambiguous and binding agreements designed to hold corporations accountable for the greenhouse gases they produce.i think most of us can agree that ultimately, their current demands are not 100% feasible or are actively impossible (at least not without radical, extremely sudden societal change) and that the ship has most likely sailed on keeping climate change from having some serious impacts. but do you think that this movement has any potential of any kind to enact change going forward? is it destined to be another Occupy, where some of its goals are taken up into politics but ultimately the movement itself collapses due to infighting and external factors? can it even be truly successful at all, given its lofty aim of an international general strike? or is it likely to just outright evaporate into functional or actual irrelevancy given enough time?
28 votes -
China Rules - They didn’t like the West’s playbook. So they wrote their own. “Part 1: The land that failed to fail.”
8 votes -
Blue Monday on Floppotron (New Order cover) (2018)
7 votes -
Pesniary - Kasiŭ Jaś kaniušynu (Yas was mowing clover)
5 votes -
When will security go back to normal?
9 votes -
The week in energy: Not all oil is equal
7 votes -
Jonestown’s victims have a lesson to teach us, so I listened
10 votes -
Former Macedonian strongman's escape to Hungary triggers a flood of disinformation
8 votes -
Cultural activist from Guyana's Wapishana tribe tries to revive a near-extinct language
6 votes -
Thanks for my coffee… On the great gratitude trail
6 votes -
Australian Open 2018: Abraham Ancer triumphs at The Lakes
4 votes -
This Week's Releases 16/11 - Anderson .Paak, The Smashing Pumpkins, Imagine Dragons
Releases of the week 10/11/2018 - 16/11/2018 Featured Release Anderson .Paak - Oxnard (R&B, Hip Hop) Oxnard marks .Paak’s first release on Dre’s Aftermath Entertainment and last of “his beach...
Releases of the week 10/11/2018 - 16/11/2018
Featured Release
Anderson .Paak - Oxnard (R&B, Hip Hop)
Oxnard marks .Paak’s first release on Dre’s Aftermath Entertainment and last of “his beach series.” “You know, we went to Venice, we went to Malibu,” .Paak noted, “so it’s only right that we take it to the next place, up the coast, up to the next beach.” As hinted previously, Dre was “heavily” involved in the making of the LP, serving as executive producer. “His music was everything to me,” Paak said of his mentor. “It molded me.”
Another famous name that pops up on Oxnard is Madlib, a veteran rapper and producer who is also known for his collaborations with DOOM, J Dilla, and Freddie Gibbs.
The new album features “sprawling psychedelic grooves and confident verses,” according to Rolling Stone, and per .Paak, a special ingredient missing from the current musical landscape. “I feel like ambition is missing from today’s music,” he explained. “This is the album I dreamed of making in high school, when I was listening to [Jay-Z]’s The Blueprint, The Game’s The Documentary, and [Kanye West’s] The College Dropout.”Notable Relases
The Smashing Pumpkins - Shiny and Oh So Bright, Vol. 1 / LP: No Past. No Future. No Sun. (Rock, Grunge)
Imagine Dragons - Origins (Pop Rock)
Mariah Carey - Caution (R&B, Pop)
The Black Eyed Peas - Masters of the Sun, Vol. 1 (Hip Hop, Pop Rap)
Feel free to discuss or feature any and all other releases in the comments below
Discussion Points
Have you listened to any of these releases?
What are your thoughts?
What are you looking forward to listen to?
What have you enjoyed from these artists in the past?This is a new format I'm trying out to help immerse people into new album discussion. I welcome and look forward to any feedback!
8 votes