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Messages - TheWinterEmissary

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Site Suggestions & Support / Re: Officially ticked off
« on: February 17, 2012, 03:40:43 PM »
Hi cenwolfgirl,

I genuinely and sincerely appreciate your explanation.  However, I actually didn't mean my post in a serious way, which is why I placed the ;) (winking) character at the end.  Many times around here people will do that, to try to convey that they are joking around.  But again, thanks for trying to help.   :)

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Site Suggestions & Support / Re: Officially ticked off
« on: February 17, 2012, 02:54:55 PM »
What's an avatar? ;)

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The Bar / Re: Edumacation And Enlearnment
« on: September 26, 2011, 10:10:02 AM »
Alright, I'll look into it.  I don't live in the area and this was a couple of years ago, so he might not be there anymore.  But I'll check into it.

At the time I just didn't think of that, it was my first time going through that process with a vet and I didn't know exactly how it was supposed to work.  I just knew that it was very upsetting and I wanted to leave asap, though again, not until after I was sure that she was gone. 

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The Bar / Re: Edumacation And Enlearnment
« on: September 26, 2011, 09:51:26 AM »
I didn't think of it at the time.  It was my family's pet, but I hadn't spent much time with her in a long while (over a decade) as I had moved out years earlier.  My parents had gone through something similar with an earlier cat, and at the time they talked to a few others in the neighborhood who made similar claims.  I couldn't believe that they wanted to take this second cat to the same vet, but they said that otherwise things seemed okay, they had already paid, and maybe the first had been a fluke or the vet had changed. 

But my experience seemed just as horrible.  The cat was about 17, and obviously failing badly physically, but she still seemed pretty alert mentally.  My parents were too upset to take her in, so they instructed me.  I wish that I had gone somewhere else and lied, but they were a lot more familiar with the situation than I was.  I tried to comfort her, tell her it would be okay and stroke her, but she was thrashing and it was just shocking that the vet kept injecting her and saying again and again that he had to "do it one more time".  I really started to question him and eventually he "got it right".  I felt extra badly that I wasn't really a loved one for her, and that she should have had better.  But it was too late to do anything more to help her, so I did my best to be comforting until she obviously was clearly gone, and then I immediately left. 

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The Bar / Re: Edumacation And Enlearnment
« on: September 26, 2011, 08:23:37 AM »
The Process doesn't.  Something is very, very wrong there.  Either the person is untrained in that area or doesn't want to do.  (I don't really want to think of the third option - that they might actually want to inflect pain.)

I don't know where the truth lies, but the vet has been in business there for over 10 years, so even if he started out untrained I have to believe that he had the opportunity to become so over such a long period of time. 

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The Bar / Re: Edumacation And Enlearnment
« on: September 26, 2011, 07:53:49 AM »
And the contrary can be quite true as well.

Yeah, I didn't include that because I think that it's pretty well likely to be taken as a given. 

Quote
Schoolin' simply can't be taken as a measure of social judgement - the stereotype of the book-nerd who is dumb at everything else is just as much to be avoided as is the stereotype of the non-formally-educated being just dumb. We can't automatically draw conclusions either way.

I think that all of the generalizations are a bad idea.  Someone could be a great people person and a great lawyer (one attribute in the "book learning" category and one attribute in the "street smart/real world" learning category), but they could stink at other facets of each like chemistry and driving a car.  I think that the truth is that there are a wide variety of skills, and some people are likely average in a lot of them, while others excel more in some areas but are weak in others.  I hold no shame in admitting that for me most forms of art are not a strong suit. 

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The Bar / Re: Edumacation And Enlearnment
« on: September 25, 2011, 10:18:13 AM »
Well this thread seemed as good a spot as any to post for my very first time on the boards. I must say I've been ever so slightly intimidated by the brainitude and smartiness of everyone here, which is why I've lurked for so long. That being said, I learned long ago that what type of sheepskin hangs on your wall isn't necessarily a good measurement of the size of one's brainpan.

Welcome! 

And I completely agree.  School measures the ability to do certain things.  People who can perform well at them can be quite unintelligent in many ways.  And people who struggle in school can be extremely intelligent in ways that the educational establishment has zero interest in. 

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The Bar / Re: Edumacation And Enlearnment
« on: September 25, 2011, 09:59:09 AM »
I thought vet's were always heroes?

Sadly, no.

I'm sure that the vast majority are, but not all.  There's one vet in my neighborhood who seemingly can't put an animal down except in a way that imo constitutes animal cruelty, and this is absolutely judged based on more than one incidence.  I can't imagine that the process is supposed to consist of the pet being stabbed many times with a needle (into the double digits) because the vet can't find/reach the vein, and attempts it in a way that conveys carelessness.  Is the animal really supposed to be crying, and thrashing for over ten minutes? 

If that's really what's expected then I guess they were doing their job, but I didn't see anything heroic about it. 

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Author Craft / Re: Interesting post about culture-specific story shapes.
« on: September 11, 2011, 04:44:46 AM »
I'm not willing to work on a basis that denies the existence of quality altogether.

Imo, "quality" is one of those terms like "attractive".  It often means different things to different people.  Sometimes dramatically so.  I think that it exists, but it can take a lot of effort for two people to understand each other well enough to employ it in a useful way. 

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Author Craft / Re: Interesting post about culture-specific story shapes.
« on: September 11, 2011, 04:38:36 AM »
I would argue, in that specific case, that the cumulative build through the series is more important than in many series.
 

I really am reluctant to give this series any more of my time.  But, in order to go the extra kilometer to ensure that I am giving it a fair chance, I purchased "A Betrayal in Winter" today.  I have quite a lot of books waiting to be read, but I will try to read it when I can, and reevaluate my impressions if necessary. 

Quote
Though I would also disagree with you on the quality of the characterisation, so some of this may well be down to taste.

Could be.  It is my belief that there are a number of factors that people use, sometimes consciously and sometimes not, in order to arrive at their final estimations of "good", "bad", "excellent", "a failure", etc.  I believe that without quite a bit of context and insight into each person's thought processes, those evaluations are nearly (or even completely) worthless.  I have seen seemingly intelligent people who prefer brevity in terms of characterization and seemingly intelligent people who prefer that characterization be written in as much depth as possible.  The fantasy author Robin Hobb is a good example of the latter preference, someone whose writing very much appeals to a portion of the audience, though at the same time there are readers who are very much put off by her style, sometimes with a passion.  I don't know if you are familiar with her work, but it struck me as a good example to contrast with Abraham's.       

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Author Craft / Re: Interesting post about culture-specific story shapes.
« on: September 11, 2011, 04:21:33 AM »
I think the argument would be that the failure of those messages to get through is part of the problem.

I'm not sure that I could safely say that based on the author's text.  But if the author, or anyone else, were to make that claim then I would certainly agree. 

And I think that it's a problem that goes both ways.  If the only U.S. culture that is reaching you is THE BIG HIT SUMMER BLOCKBUSTER then it's definitely a "part of the problem".  But the problem isn't that that is all that the U.S. culture is creating.  It's a problem that that's what is being most effectively sold and marketed by U.S. corporations and then is being bought by other nations' media buyers and being consumed in sufficient quantities to perpetuate the cycle. 

For example, I'm more familiar with U.S. television then I am with movies.  I know that the CSI brands sell, and then rate, quite well in a number of different markets.  When shows like those are some of the bigger successes, then it helps to keep them being made in the U.S. and seems to show the media buyers in those markets that those are the sorts of properties that the buyers should continue to look for.  For a long time Baywatch was far more popular in many other countries than it was in the U.S. and so imo those non-U.S. consumers should certainly share some responsibility for that particular "contribution" to the world culture.  I'm absolutely not disputing that the U.S. content producers, sellers and some portion of the American people play a part in that which the author was complaining of.  But I do believe that there is more to the equation than they discussed.  In the same way, I can't believe that every Canadian should be responsible for Justin Bieber.   ;)

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Author Craft / Re: Interesting post about culture-specific story shapes.
« on: September 08, 2011, 12:41:54 AM »
I also have to disagree with the assessment of the Long Price Quartet as excellent.  Obviously such assignations are ultimately only a personal determination, but ime there is something approximating a 50/50 split between those who are impressed by it and those who are not. 

I only ever read the first book, but while I would agree that the prose was indeed lovely, imo that is not always a good thing. I prefer to immerse myself in the tale being told, and oftentimes find that if the writing is too noticeable then it can be too much of a distraction from the other elements of the story for my tastes.

Otherwise, there isn't much about the book that would give me reason to recommend it. The plot, at it's most basic, was intriguing and I found the same with a few details of the culture as well. But all in all, I found the characters quite insubstantial and shallow in terms of their development and the story itself to be bare bones and not terribly interesting.  More than anything, it reminded me of a Young Adult book that was written well.  There is nothing inherently wrong with that, but for me that is a far cry from "excellence".  It was a book that I really wanted to like, but unfortunately for me that wasn't the case.

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Author Craft / Re: Interesting post about culture-specific story shapes.
« on: September 08, 2011, 12:34:10 AM »
Speaking as an American living in Los Angeles, I have to ask: People place that much importance on Hollywood movies?  Really?? 

In all seriousness, these are flimsy diversions meant as entertainment with a major emphasis on entertaining.  There is little effort made for accuracy, seriousness, or much else that the author appears to be looking for. 

I did appreciate most of this paragraph (though I still have issues with the end of it):

"And before you ask, yes, I know those are tropes, and I know that not *all* US books/movies/series follow them, just like not all French books feature, say, bumbling bosses or people going on strike–and that not all groups or minorities in the US agree with those tropes. I’m just commenting on something that, for good or evil, the US has managed to export abroad (thank you, Hollywood) and therefore is the perception of US storytelling from my window, and the window of a great deal many people in the world".

But I think that the author should have kept it much more in mind for the rest of the article than they did.  Some U.S. companies export, some of them prove successful, but it doesn't make those successes representative of anything more than monetary gains for the one, or few, companies doing each of those incidences of exporting.  Also, if ten, twenty or thirty million Americans watch a movie then that means that hundreds of millions of Americans don't.  And there's no guarantee that those who did watch whatever movie is in question enjoyed it, agreed with it, or took it at all seriously. 

Let's take a look at the argument from the reverse.  Many other countries manage to effectively export little culturally here, would the author really argue that American audiences should base their perceptions on those few messages that get through in our popular culture?  We hear that the Irish like green, potatoes and Leprechauns.  That Italians like or put up with leather, pasta and gangsters.  Should the US population really accept that that is all that there is to those countries and then judge their populations on it?  How would denizens of those nations appreciate posts like the following, based on the cultural messages that get through?  I would say they wouldn't, but that seems to be the argument that the author is applying to the US.  Here's an example,

"Dear Irish, it seems that you like the color green too much.  There are many other colors and your fixation on green strikes us as unhealthy.  Have you thought of giving others colors a chance"?

Sincerely, The Concerned Citizens of the U.S.A. 

The above just seems nonsensical. 

Further, it's hard to take seriously anyone who would make assumptions about US racism from movies.  The US is a big place and what goes on in one State, in some key ways, often has little bearing on another.  England and Italy are both European, but could observers rightfully claim that they are essentially synonymous and representative of each other?   

Ultimately, Hollywood movies are mostly trivial entertainments with little basis in reality.  For example, Los Angeles County and it's surrounding area, which contains Hollywood, has large concentrations of many ex-patriate groups, such as Armenians, Persians, Koreans, and Vietnamese.  How often do you see that mentioned in Hollywood movies, especially in movies dealing with "race"?  Those movies tend to focus on "blacks" and "whites" but don't even include the large numbers of "blacks" who moved in their lifetimes from Africa or the Caribbean, or "whites" who came from Australia, Canada, England, etc.  Much less the many, many, many groups from all over Central & South America, Europe, Asia, etc.  Obviously people have the right to view the US as they like, but imo the greater fault here lies with those who take these movies much more seriously than they deserve.     

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The Bar / Re: Edumacation
« on: September 02, 2011, 06:23:32 AM »
I was never very interested in school (theoretically yes, in terms of the classes/professors I actually had not so much). 

But I still managed a BA in Political Science and an AA in Speech Communications. 

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DF Reference Collection / Re: Dresden Files Purity 2.0
« on: August 30, 2011, 02:24:47 AM »
Wizard of the White council

Your total Dresden Files purity rating is 25.1%

All scores:

Supernatural Power:39.5%
Social Skills:45.5%
Armed Combat:9.1%
Unarmed Combat:1.3%

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