Vids other than surfing thread (cool doccos, movies etc)
Sassy the Sasquatch every single episode all in one:
thanks again udo, some good stuff there as always. Getting the full(er) GG story was interesting. That's started me down a little rabbithole
Great Glen E Friedman interview btw WS, a good reminder to us all, if you have opinionated rants keep them fun, keep them light, know your shit, and be self aware.
icandig wrote:This looks fun...and scary. Scary and fun.
Watched tonight. Happy to report that it's as stupid as I thought it would be. Highly recommended. Three and a half stars.
Can't listen to beetroot Joe, but I did enjoy Beef. Agree about it losing pace, first 3 eps were great. Production and editing borrowed a lot from operatic shows like Mr Robot and worked well, acting was awesome. Their love/hate rivalry was the keystone.. that picked up again in the desert..
indo-dreaming wrote:Finished the Netflix series Beef last night
Really dug it just the character's and style in which it was done and a good unique story line, first few episodes was the best and ending good but little flat in some areas through the middle, but still very good..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AFPIMHBzGDs
David Choe character was awesome, and ive been a big fan of his since his Thumb's up America days (when Vice was actually good)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QO3-AAVTeDAAnd since then the dude became super rich from his art actually doing a mural for $60K for Facebook office when facebook was only 5 months old, he got paid in stocks that ended up being worth hundreds of millions.
He is a little bit controversial though said some weird fully dodgy shit basically confessed to sexual assault through a story on a podcast and he is super super loose, but interesting character all the same.
Recent Joe Rogan interview worth a listen (he has been on before)
Heres a taste of his unique loose completely honest thinking
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6hvg8MMafM
Agreed, just watched Beef myself finishing it last week.
Worth a watch.
The Alpinist, think it's on netflix.
If you like, Dawn Wall, Free Solo, Valley Rising....
Thanks Patrick, just watched Valley Uprising - enjoyed it.
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Last few days I worked my way through Dopesick. Only eight episodes long, not much of an investment, yet worth a watch.
Made sense to choose that series as I'm recovering from busted bones using oxycodone for pain relief. Get a little sense of the Greek tragedy that unfolded for the Sackler family who made a drug with the noble aim of easing chronic pain, yet unwittingly set off a decades-long opioid epidemic that's so far directly killed over a million US citizens by overdose and ruined the lives of many millions more.
A Greek tragedy but a distinctly modern American story; of commercial interests besting government regulation, of marketing trumping science, and money ruling over all else - even for a family of physicians who supposedly followed the Hippocratic oath.
Gold standard performances, especially from old mate who plays OxyContin inventor and Purdue Pharma CEO Richard Sackler. With a soft, raspy voice and facial tick approximating a perma-frown, he's a Jewish aristocrat version of Marlon Brando's Godfather, and the metaphor easily covers the role he plays, manouvering the family company away from the authorities as the bodies pile up.
Michael Keaton plays an opposite-Batman role, a soft spoken small town doctor who begins prescribing OC for his patients, who largely end up addicts, before he also succumbs, losing his medical license and a large whack of dignity while necking 400mg a day. The foil pack next to my bed has 20 tablets of 5mg. Finish that and I have to get a new prescription, all recorded on a national database.
Though it's entertainment it's hard to watch Dopesick and not take in the differences between here and there.
indo-dreaming wrote:Been watching the Australian version of "Alone" on SBS.
Not as good as the USA version but still worth watching, I just think the contestants aren't as of as high quality.
The older chubby women forgot her name is onto it though and the X military guy is a character, i think one of them two will win most likely the women.
Best bit of the show is just the scenery an amazing beautiful part of the world.
Biggest surprise is how glassy it has been expected way more wind, when i lived in Tassie when i went down the west coast 99% of the time it was howling, onshore , offshore, cross shore.
I don't mind the contestants, especially enjoyed the survival guide who called himself "the baddest motherfucker in the woods" and then tapped out after three days. Obviously missed his guns.
What this series lacks against the North American versions is bears. The calls of "hey bear" and hands on the bear spray makes for constant tension. Reckon that's why the producers went with so many Aborginal/Indigenous contestants - there were four out of ten. They largely brought something to the show in terms of survival, though I don't think any of them will win.
For mine, it's between Gina the mildly overweight forest nymph and Mike the pademelon hunter. Both seem to have the temperament to see the distance.
EDIT: Also surprised by how glassy it's been, but then again they say it's 'West Coast Tassie' but it's obviously not on the coast. It's a dammed river so must be inland some ways which might lessen the westerly wind.
NZ cult classic on last night SBS, hope IB was watching, Black Sheep
One of the classics with Al Pacino and Deniro, Val Kilmer, Jon Voight and Tom Sizemore...more excellent cast involved such as a young whats her name..i forget...anyway she has turned out to be a great actor..
free to watch for now.
Only part that annoys me is Al Pacinos (vincent) and his wives love scenes seem to turn ugly in a short duration of the movie..She married a dedicated cop what the hell does she expect?
Also a guy like deniro and his crew can be anywhere in america or USA even in LA at any truck or bank, ALL the cops have to be at all of them...So i dont like how snitches always gets them caught or almost caught.in these films.
Anyway maybe the best heist movie of all time.
Another one here the town- $4.99 usd rent maybe aud not sure.
https://www.justwatch.com/au/movie/the-town
I Think data bank storage these days means no cash or gold in vaults any more so movies like these will be a thing of the past, maybe not now but soon id say.And gold? maybe gold will be in vaults but takes too long to get a black market decent price.
Hey Groundswell, if you liked those two I would recommend "to Live and Die in L.A." a similar style of gritty crime movie, stars Willam Dafoe as a counterfeiter with crooked cops after him, one of the best car chases in movie history, you should look it up, think you'd like it.
thanks Adam. Just found the full movie on youtube-
and ive been a fan of dafoe ever since i saw Platoon and his flanking tricking the enemy and seemed like a true warrior in that movie.
My mate had it in his collection and said platoon was a shit movie but i loved it.
He also didnt like wall street but i did.
arcadia wrote:Thanks Patrick, just watched Valley Uprising - enjoyed it.
Thanks for the Alpinist tip, Patrick. Will watch.
Valley Uprising is hilarious. Millennial teenagers should watch as an eyeopener :-)
Alpinist is great. Free solo extreme climbing on thin ice, snow, icy rock terrible weather - realms of additional danger unthought of in the early pioneering days of warm Yosemite rock.
Chimp Empire - interesting and amazing footage of daily life and an insight into our beginnings.
both on Netflix
Valley Uprising is a classic. What a life.
Here's an intersection between Valley Uprising and climbing's development, what's happening in surfing with it's recent popularity and crowding, and the snow. A very good look at how the classic Ski Towns have changed:
More intersections...
Apparently if you thought the 1990s were a bit of a rough start in the adult world in Australia, they were not at all fun for young people in Japan: they truly became a 'lost generation'. Imagine you have one day after graduation to land that secure, lifetime job - and nobody is hiring that decade.
The phenomenon has rolled over into the younger generations too, and gave rise to the Hikikomori. This seems like an incredible alienation of young men. We've discussed who might be the 'beautiful ones' in the modern world's mouse experiment before, and I'm going 180 on my view: it's not the beautiful young longboarders (they are more likely to be narcissistic sociopaths instead) - it is actually these young Hikikomori. They are the 'beautiful ones'. At about 24:00 the New Start boys dress up in cosplay and go out into town with a banner highlighting their plight; afterward they put on a play, and at 25:20 young Mr Nakamoto shows wisdom way beyond his years:
"The thing about NEETs and Hikikomori, they're not greedy, and they don't get ahead by riding roughshod over others. This is my mantra."
They seem to be gentle souls in a crazy world.
So I'm going to run with the theme: this withdrawing from work has much wider appeal, here's "Let it Rot" from the young Chinese:
This one was a stunner, and the consistency in the comments is striking.
In the States, there's 7 million (!) men who've just gone their own way. They neither work or are looking for work. They are doing their own thing. Intersecting themes: the work being bullshit and not paid highly enough for the perceived hassle, the provision of inexpensive entertainment, women and especially marriage being viewed more negatively than positively.
This young writer perhaps puts the threads together better than most, he argues for a young man the main needs of an individual have been made progressively more attainable (ie cost less) over the last 30 years and if you don't have a wife/house/family, you can actually have a decent life on very moderate earnings. Combined with dating/relationship/career progression stresses, it's more rewarding.
I'd say in Australia we haven't progressed as far toward this situation as the Americans have, but our young and poorer citizens are far more exposed to a high-cost environment that parts of the States don't see.
velocityjohnno wrote:This one was a stunner, and the consistency in the comments is striking.
Good video, VJ. The first one I mean. A very significant number and you can see why it goes unreported: not only are they retreating from society but they're far from the knowledge class so largely invisible to anyone working in media.
Made me wonder what's going to happen when AI kneecaps that class the way neoliberalism did blue collar workers. Will they still have a voice, or will they silently retreat from society too?
Did you not get frustrated, even mildly, at the purely quantitative approach of Nicholas? In one way, he's not unlike the people he's studying, locked away in his basement staring at a screen for hours on end. Sure, his screen time is productive, but just once I was hoping he could give a quantitative answer and rather than rely on statistical patterns say, "Yes, the people I've spoken to said..."
Also, 2,000 of screen time per annum, while on a lounge, not working, is mind-bending. An army being assembled of the angry and disenfranchised, useless on the battlefield but handy for anyone harnessing the power of an online bloc. The mother of all meme wars awaits.
indo-dreaming wrote:Kinda random and im not much of a car guy, but this was still kinda cool.
And there's the best YT vid I've seen in ages! Young country crew being productive, creative, and funny as hell.
They had me at "but we'll give it a red-hot go..."
Epic!
stunet wrote:velocityjohnno wrote:This one was a stunner, and the consistency in the comments is striking.
Good video, VJ. The first one I mean. A very significant number and you can see why it goes unreported: not only are they retreating from society but they're far from the knowledge class so largely invisible to anyone working in media.
Made me wonder what's going to happen when AI kneecaps that class the way neoliberalism did blue collar workers. Will they still have a voice, or will they silently retreat from society too?
Did you not get frustrated, even mildly, at the purely quantitative approach of Nicholas? In one way, he's not unlike the people he's studying, locked away in his basement staring at a screen for hours on end. Sure, his screen time is productive, but just once I was hoping he could give a quantitative answer and rather than rely on statistical patterns say, "Yes, the people I've spoken to said..."
Also, 2,000 of screen time per annum, while on a lounge, not working, is mind-bending. An army being assembled of the angry and disenfranchised, useless on the battlefield but handy for anyone harnessing the power of an online bloc. The mother of all meme wars awaits.
Agree stu. Anyway, quantitative blurts like this will be the first AI-created videos, so there's a poetry in this interview (Chris already looks and sounds AI).
(great beardy bush bomb vid indo (not a car guy either, other than maintaining my old holden which is more like tech lego). rust valley on netflix?
A great example of a qualitative researcher, and some overlap with vids above. Jeff Ferrell, a career dumpster diver who gave up his professorship to...erm, dive right into the movement then write about his experiences. Can't truly experience what it's like when you have the safety net of a wage.
Only a short vid but some pearls of wisdom about transgression ("the spark of creativity can come from confronting that which limits us"), train hopping, and lesser known Woody Guthrie lyrics.
That was really cool.
that was a cool vid, and impressive guest for vocation-oriented carnegie-mellon to host. Drift re Flow. Let go, don't try to control. Sparks can come from restrictions. Great artists love limitations, it forces a deeper explore - woody storytelling with just his parlor guitar, picasso in his blue period, chefs going seasonal and local. Lars von Trier with a camcorder. MP riding recycled single fins. David Byrne with powerpoint:
https://newsarchive.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/03/08_byrne.shtml
Watch Chimp Empire and listen to Joe Rogan episode 1988 with James Reed the Chimp Empire director. It is fascinating to listen to Reed and carry that over to the Netflix doco.
https://www.netflix.com/au/title/81311783
Power is a zero-sum game, Indo. You either have it or you don’t. Binary,even.
Re the “Yes, women have gained rights”, one has to happen for the other to happen. Women’s equality is based on men losing their ‘superiority’ position.
It has been a man’s world.
Finally watched The Alpinist. At first I thought it was going to be cringe awful, with the super geeky climbers, the ultra earnest crew, the predictable cliches.
But then it took a very good turn, and I really enjoyed it apart from a growing sense of unease.
I won’t spoil anything for those that haven’t watched it.
Btw, for those interested in the mountains and alpinism, I can recommend Hermann Buhl’s memoir Nanga Parbat Pilgrimage. He was a total badass.
After 24 hours on a mountain rescue, he knocked off Friday evening, cycled 200km to Switzerland (this is in early 50s), climbed Piz Badile solo in 4.5hr, before then taking rope teams 3 days.
Then he walked down to his bike, cycled 200km home only to fall asleep on the handlebars and waking up in the Inn River.
Unbelievable stuff.
Island Bay wrote:Finally watched The Alpinist. At first I thought it was going to be cringe awful, with the super geeky climbers, the ultra earnest crew, the predictable cliches.
But then it took a very good turn, and I really enjoyed it apart from a growing sense of unease.
I won’t spoil anything for those that haven’t watched it.
Great film...
Charlie Brooker is still maintaining the highest of standards. New season of Black Mirror is great. Only watched ep 1 but it hits the mark.
Indonesia is full of so many contradictions in so many different ways but this place takes the cake.