I used to work at a fish market, and one of the fishermen we dealt with once won a large sum of money from a big fishing tournament. When they asked him what he was gonna do with the money, his response was, "Keep fishing until it's all gone."
As my dad would say, "A boat is a hole in the water you throw money into." Boats are cool and fun if you like to sail, but between maintenance costs, mooring fees, the cost to take it out of the water and store it at a boat yard once the season is over, scrape the barnacles off, repaint it, etc. it's not a cheap endeavor.
He has a long history of incidents like, "Hey, why are you following those white supremacist accounts on Twitter and promoting their books?" or "Oops, I was wearing an iron cross just as a joke!" and "I paid a dude to yell, 'I hate Jews!' as a prank, bro."
He did more than make fucked up jokes, though. He was pushing white supremacist accounts that he followed on social media at one point to his young and impressionable audience. The proof is in the pudding, as they say, and he hasn't done anything to rectify that situation one way or the other. Given the evidence we have, he could've simply started wearing his iron cross behind closed doors instead of on stream.
Having lived long enough to see the edgy teenagers making 4channer jokes grow up to and have those become their actual beliefs, I believe in Philosophical Inertia. You say something often enough, and it becomes what you truly believe. And until you prove otherwise, I am going to assume that your beliefs continue on that same course.
Is. Continues to be. And it isn't just Japan. Worldwide, the games industry has always had horrible work-life balance (some cases being better or worse than others, of course).
I went to college to go into the industry 10 years ago and never did because of the things our professors (who were all industry veterans, some still actively working in the industry and some having been in the industry since the 80s) told us. "Nobody makes video games because they want to get rich." Upon graduation with a 4 year degree (and a hundred thousand in debt probably), I was expected to make the same annually as I did if I worked year-round at my summer job. Everybody today talks about crunch time as a problem in industries. Video games are crunch time. We were told to expect to work on a project for 4 years, with the last few months being spent in the office 7 days a week, no holidays, and orobably eating breakfast, lunch, and dinner in the office. Maybe even sleeping there as well. Clocking out after 8 hours would be seen as being a traitor to the company. And after a project ships? Dust off your resume, because unless you're senior level, you're gonna be fired as the company downsizes until the next project.
The mass layoffs the past 3 years have been worse each year than in the 2008 recession. There are people working at the Blizzard main office who live out of their cars because they can't afford an apartment within commuting distance of the office. The list goes on and on. And they can get away with it because they're exploiting the passion of people who just want to make something that people will enjoy and there's an endless stream of starry-eyed college kids ready to throw themselves into the grinder.
I'm in my 30s and still get this kind of advice occasionally when I'm job hunting from my retired parents. My mom still talks about "rising through the ranks" even though I've been telling her for a decade that that's not a thing anymore. Nobody goes from mail room to CEO. And nobody gets a gold watch either.
YouTube has some sort of sorting algorithm, but I have no idea what it sorts by. I've had a video open, looked at some of the comments, then come back the next day, refreshed the page, and had a new set of comments at the top from the same time period, with no discernible pattern to why they're positioned where they are. You might find the top comment you saw previously with 1.5k likes 10 comments down the next day and a comment with 200-400 likes at the top, followed by a comment with 7k likes you didn't see previously, and all from 5 months ago when the video was first posted.
Twitch also requires you to do a certain number of ads per hour/amount of ad time per hour in order to hit the partnership levels for decent pay. Otherwise, IIRC, Twitch puts their own ads in and the streamer doesn't receive any revenue from the ads.
I think Thor over at Pirate Software did a video on it back when that whole "Twitch Adpocalypse" drama was happening.
I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to 'order' than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice [...]
This is exactly why I stopped watching Twitch. It was the only service I tolerated ads on. Until they hit a point where the frequency and number of ads were just unbearable and I haven't opened the site since.
I believe there's been a few like that. I think there was an eye contact one, but also one that required you to stand up during ads and another that counted the number of people in the room to make sure you bought the right number of pay per view tickets?
You should ask him if he's heard about the recently released statistics that revealed that the Cybertruck is substantially more likely to catch fire in an accident than the Ford Pinto. You know, the car that is notorious for catching fire when rear-ended because the fuel tank is directly behind the rear bumper.
But he doesn't have to worry about that, because Musk is getting rid of the office in charge of keeping track of that sort of stuff, so he can be assured that he will never know if the next car he buys is gonna explode for no reason due to poor manufacturing until it does.
Yeah, you'd need something like Trump saying that he liked to surprise the young contestants at the Trump Beauty Pagents by opening the doors of the changing rooms while the girls were naked.
Oh, he did say that? Oh. He also talked about flying on his private jet with Epstein and some of the girls to the pagents? Oh.
There's also the "fire everyone, then hire them back at a reduced salary while leaning on the fact that they care about preventing deaths enough to take the deal" aspect.
I used to work at a fish market, and one of the fishermen we dealt with once won a large sum of money from a big fishing tournament. When they asked him what he was gonna do with the money, his response was, "Keep fishing until it's all gone."