Ryujin
Legend
I'm guessing that people don't remember Garret Morris, or more would find that funnyPeter, Paul, and Mary did this for part of a concert I saw in the 90s.
Of course, SNL were also pioneers with their news for the hearing impaired.
I'm guessing that people don't remember Garret Morris, or more would find that funnyPeter, Paul, and Mary did this for part of a concert I saw in the 90s.
Of course, SNL were also pioneers with their news for the hearing impaired.
Sure, there are still the outliers, but what you usually hear on the radio isn't that. In the late '60s/early '70s it was wall to wall storytelling.
But yeah, I also listen to other stuff. Thing is that much of it hearkens back to even earlier times.
I'm pretty sure Auto-correct got to that last word, but it does bring up the image of a bunch of deaf people at a specialized bar / concert venue using sign language to join in and accompany the band.![]()
It’s one of the differences between Catholicism and most protestant branches, including Lutheranism- the dominant denomination in Germany.Required? Wow, the churches in Germany would get laughed in the face if they tried that
This was posted as an observation about the pandemic, but this also encapsulates, perfectly, a feeling I've had when having discussions on the internet. A truly good metaphor or analogy can be used to illuminate; they are the perfect mechanism when you are trying to explain something in order to get a concept across.
But far too often, internet discussions are not conversations and are not viewed (by many people) as an attempt to understand something, but instead as attempt to battle it.
hmm, I wonder if this is an American culture thing.I read something just now that I had to post here-
Something I’ve noticed in recent years that Wu didn’t get into is that readers desire precision in metaphors and analogies, even though metaphor is — by definition! — not supposed to be taken literally. People seem much more interested in taking analogies apart, identifying what doesn’t work, and discarding them rather than — more generously and constructively IMO — using them as the author intended to better understand the subject matter. The perfect metaphor doesn’t exist because then it wouldn’t be a metaphor.
(h/t kottke.org)
This was posted as an observation about the pandemic, but this also encapsulates, perfectly, a feeling I've had when having discussions on the internet. A truly good metaphor or analogy can be used to illuminate; they are the perfect mechanism when you are trying to explain something in order to get a concept across.
But far too often, internet discussions are not conversations and are not viewed (by many people) as an attempt to understand something, but instead as attempt to battle it. So instead of attempting to see the utility (even if limited) of the analogy, all the effort is put into rubbishing it because ... the analogy is not, and cannot be, the same as whatever is being discussed. sigh
Ask "What is the sound of one hand clapping" and they go meditate. We sit around flapping our fingers into our palms and grin at how clever we are.