I would absolutely not use the word "superficial" to describe Barbie, and feel fairly confident you haven't seen the movie given that you've chosen it.
The fediverse is less like Twitter and more like email. You sign up for email through a provider, like Gmail or Outlook, and they have control over your access to the other users and pay the costs of running your hardware, the same way you sign up with a particular domain on Lemmy or Mastodon. Like email, you have an inbox that receives messages, and communities are like email groups you join and send messages to. And, like email, it's based on standards that everyone has agreed on through a group called the w3 consortium.
I just spent last night migrating off goodreads and moving my lists out of libby, and there are definitely still some rough edges, but it'll get you there.
I use bi personally, but pan people argue that they're more than two genders and they are attracted to all of them. I use bi because my sexuality is dualistic -- I have both heterosexual and homosexual attractions. The two are effectively synonymous.
I dunno about taboo, but I think there'll be a lot fewer "monosexual" (homo/hetero people) and a lot more bi/pan people. I think we're seeing an increase already in acceptance that most people have at least a few people of their non-preferred gender they're attracted to, and those kinds of mentalities will permeate to a mushy continuum of sexuality, rather than hard categories.
Seeing the difference in the two nucleotide chains between the disordered personality and a "normal" personality (that's a gross oversimplification, I know) would be meaningful to me personally, at least.
I think we can even calculate about how often it happens. My math is gonna be Amerigo-centric because I'm American and so are fortune cookies.
There are ~3 billion fortune cookies produced yearly in the USA, so 8.2 million cookies are opened per day. There are 292,201,338 PowerBall combinations. That means that there's about a 2.8% chance that someone opens a fortune cookie that has any given lotteries numbers on it. But wait! There isn't just one "the lottery"; there are 48 states and territories in the US, and my state (Washington) has four games. Assuming everyone's state is like mine, and you randomly select a lottery to play, that leaves us with a much more modest .014% chance that on a given day, someone opens a fortune cookie with their lottery number on it.
It's definitely an older one