Something a little more lighthearted, I love these Picard and Riker memes, endlessly adaptable to the one-liner. And it's the same for Kirk and Spock, and then we have a little crossover meme, Douglas Adams imagined galaxy sending a message to Spock's Tri-Corder. And in a final flourish Colm Meaney's `Miles O'Brien' from various Star Trek iterations taking Riker's place at the table, and the Firms 1987 hit Star Trekkin.
Grim's Reality ... It's Later Than You Think. Life is a journey into the unknown, even if you think you know where you are going.
Friday, 18 March 2022
Thursday, 17 March 2022
The Mental Toolkit
Memes The Dark Arts
Memes used to just be funny by and large. But over time the meme; a combination of precis coupled with pictures has become more than the sum of its parts. So, if a picture paints a thousand words … a picture with two dozen words actually paints a picture with ten thousand words.
This first one is a reference to both the pandemic that has savaged liberties and freedom as well as killing millions (though probably not as many millions as directly as the doom-mongers would like you to believe). For us in the northern hemisphere at least (the free west ... I think) it points to how quickly the Russian invasion of Ukraine swept the pandemic news away ... Abracadabra!
I guess it all falls back to the dark art of marketing, it’s not exactly a new discovery, but it is an adaption that is freely accessible to anyone who wants to make a particular point barbed for maximum penetration using very few words. And as we saw with the first set posted, you can take classic themes, character quotes from classic characters, real or imagined and recombine them to your own ends. Or as below just take the words already written and amplify them with a sub-definition.
The interesting part of the process is that when you take
an imagined character’s attributes from a fictional narrative (Morpheus from
the Matrix in the previous example), then the amplification of the message is
exponential in effect. As the emperor clearly demonstrates below. Anyone who doesn't have a `penny drop' moment looking at the meme is likely to be clinically dead or lived in a cave on a desert island since the mid-1970's.
Beyond that is the diversity of uses that an image can be used for, but we will look at that another day … and probably on a lighter note.
Sunday, 13 March 2022
Plants a Garden Centre Adventure.
As may have been
mentioned elsewhere (I don't track what I write per see), I had a collection of
plants at my last home. Of ninety-five plants in that collection (approximately
sixty-five separate displays or creations), eighty or more were rehomed by my
ex-partner who didn't want to look after them or care for them until I found
somewhere to live.
She doorstepped
me a few weeks back with a terrarium I made from a broken demijohn, that had (since
I left my old home) been over-watered to the point that it was more water than
soil, a prayer plant she bought me (it has nice leaves but I don’t feel for it),
and a tray of mixed Christmas and Easter cacti I took from single leaf cuttings
from my mother (who has just celebrated her eighty-seventh birthday). There are
twelve in the tray and they flower periodically.
Yesterday, 12th
of March 2022, I took a trip to the garden centre and spent £36 on a few `tots’
tiny plants, mere infants in the grand scheme of things. I videoed the process,
and appended below is the feature-length movie of that day's exploits 😊
Parody Inversion Point
Depressingly true. I reckon we could on the basis of this we could end up in Whoops Apocalypse moment sans hypnotised nuclear submarine captain. I reckon there is likely to be an equation/formula that would prove that this isn't actually a joke and more of a theory accidentally discovered by Dilberts creator while trying to reason on the observable ridiculousness of the world we are currently living in. He felt it, but hasn't done the maths ... but it's there sure as grass is green. The simple mass of collective geopolitical players collapsing in on itself thus imploding, creating a feedback loop, and boom.
Joe Rogan, Siddharth Kara: Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives.
Ok, so this isn’t my usual fare (and hello … I have been absent, it happens, I’m a very busy man all of a sudden). Below is an economist Edi...
