Chaotic Neutral would be WingDings.
Chaotic Neutral would be WingDings.
Agreed, I enjoyed The Fall Guy and really didn't care about a plot driven stunt sequence in a movie about a stuntman.Movies watched in-flight: Ocean's 8 (2018) and The Fall Guy (2024). I like a good heist film, and Ocean's 8 is pleasant -- it has a lot of stars who get to do cool stuff, and the story fits well with the previous Ocean's films. The Fall Guy was another pleasant movie. I remember some people telling me earlier this year that they didn't like the unrealistic stunt being used to advance the plot, which is funny because I watched the TV show in the Eighties, and every single episode hinged on an unrealistic stunt being used to advance the plot. Like, if they hadn't done that, it wouldn't have been a Fall Guy movie! I think this is like if anybody complained about the kind-of-hokey fight scenes in The A-Team movie, when that was something seen in every episode of the TV show...
I would be, but as @Ryujin suggests, it may be a field-specific issue. I can definitely see technical and legal writing really valuing comma usage, as there are some very famous and expensive whoopsies when they weren't used as needed.You'd be surprised.
It's a tool to be used. Just because a screwdriver is really important to use when turning a screw means it should be used in every job, which is what the memes seem to suggest.Punctuation rules like the Oxford comma, OTOH, can really wreck your prose if ignored at the wrong moment.
There are some other rather notable fields in which the presence or absence of a comma, in a document, has resulted a great deal of headache. Such as <insert document here that would be immediately recognizable to the lawyers on the board, but cannot really be discussed>.I would be, but as @Ryujin suggests, it may be a field-specific issue. I can definitely see technical and legal writing really valuing comma usage, as there are some very famous and expensive whoopsies when they weren't used as needed.
I might amend that to say within certain bounds, they're rarely crucial. It's like having freedom to pick the color of your tie... as long as you're wearing a proper suit and not a clown suit.
I'm a professional writer and have been a professional editor. Most writers care a lot about "silly things" like the Oxford comma, others don't care at all. Some care way, way too much. It takes all kinds.I would be, but as @Ryujin suggests, it may be a field-specific issue. I can definitely see technical and legal writing really valuing comma usage, as there are some very famous and expensive whoopsies when they weren't used as needed.
Yeah, I changed my tune. I'm not a book writer and don't know any authors well. The writers I know are in an entirely different field and view the Oxford comma as a tool to be brought out when appropriate, but using it otherwise is a stylistic choice. The people in my community who get really wound up about it -- in the way I often see non-writers get passionate about it -- are seen as oddballs.I'm a professional writer and have been a professional editor. Most writers care a lot about "silly things" like the Oxford comma, others don't care at all. Some care way, way too much. It takes all kinds.