I just look at these movies now and I can't help but get this weird incel vibe from them? I dunno. The only other torture scene I can think of from a Disney movie is the Incredibles, but that was more for Syndrome to gloat at Bob.
Back when I was about 15, I was invited to a Christmas Eve gathering by a friend of the family, who had a young kid, maybe 7 or 8, and I had a gift picked out for everyone but him. I spent a long time combing through gifts at the mall but I really didn't know all that much about him. I settled on one of those 3D wooden puzzles, a roadster.
Come Christmas Eve, and I'm anxiously awaiting people opening my gifts hoping I'd chosen well. The kid gets to my gift and turns to his parents and says "Wow, you got it after all!" They were dumbfounded. Turns out he'd been asking for that exact kit but they had passed it up. I felt like a million bucks that night.
Honestly it's not the information so much as the way it's organized that I'd like to save. It is the best resource for putting together characters, currently.
Like, could I just have the aux jack back please? I can frig with my phone before I put the car in drive and just push audio through the speakers, I don't need to be able to sort through my playlists or make calls from the steering wheel, I'm distracted enough by billboards, for chrissakes. The only thing I like about my phone being connected to my car is that I can skip forward and back, that's it.
Not a favorite per se but in Hey Jude, around the 3 minute mark depending on which one you listen to, you might be able to hear Paul with a "Fucking Hell" because apparently he made a mistake.
You know, it's funny, I've said to friends that if my job were a person, someone would need to call APS because I'm in an abusive relationship I can't escape.
I've got a whole fucking playlist for real sadboy hours on rainy drives home where I want to get lost in the back of my mind and it's like 50% this band.
Hold up, does someone know how to save an entire site? I would really like to get the 5e wikidot archived in case Hasbro or whoever wants to shut it down for good.
Of the OWSC-type games that I've played, the one I've enjoyed most is Raft, and even then I get burnt out on it pretty quickly. I think it's because, at least until you get your raft surrounded with metal plated platforms, there's a very direct relationship between the materials you pick up and the amount of 'base' you can build, and so you're pretty constantly engaged with collecting, refining, and using most of your supplies in a very straightforward and immediately gratifying manner.
The thing in these games that burns me out is, it seems to be a neverending parade of collecting materials and recipes to get better materials and recipes, to the point that you're thumbing through like eight different pages or tabs of schematics looking for what you need to make, then digging through some arcane storage system to get the shit you need to make the shit you need. After a certain point, it feels like having a second job.
Try to establish yourself as someone who is helpful, but be mindful of the boundaries you're pushing when you make the offer. Anything you choose to do for free once becomes a part of your job duties forevermore.
Maybe it's just me getting older, but since Skyrim, Bethesda games have failed to capture that magic for me. They've been leaning on the creation engine for too long, to the point that so many of the features, not the least of which being the goddamn shouts, are all carbon copies of one another, the base building is literally just a fucking resource sink, the gunplay sucks and the enemies are all bullet sponges unless you dip into late game planets and filch a late game gun, the jobs are 90% basic bitch fetch quests, and the core gameplay loop of "go place --> grab shit --> sell shit" has not evolved since Morrowind.
I stop playing games when they start feeling like a second job, and for me that point in Starfield was about three hours in when I was trying to complete survey data for the homesteading program and I was wandering around this deserted planet, looking for samples of flora and fauna, and I scoot back from my desk as I realize, for 20 minutes, I have done absolutely nothing meaningful or engaging. The closest I've come is, I've pointed a scanner at a bunch of procedurally generated animals hoping they don't land a hit on me because they're too spongy for me to kill, so I can fill a meter, so that when I'm done filling meters I can go back to BDG and tell him this place is suitable for people to live. That's not fun. It barely qualifies as gameplay, and it is an aggressive waste of time.
If you want to use a colon, you can phrase it "There's one thing I'll never do again: Miss the bus."