MyRetroTVs »
I’m a big believer in nostalgia as a form of self-soothing and this site is an incredible example of it. Currently working with 80s cartoons on the other screen and it’s bringing me a tremendous amount of peace.
I’m a big believer in nostalgia as a form of self-soothing and this site is an incredible example of it. Currently working with 80s cartoons on the other screen and it’s bringing me a tremendous amount of peace.
sickos.jpg YES… HA HA HA… YES!
Since the rise of LLMs, the number of personal blogs I’ve been subscribing to has exploded. People are actually writing for other people again and not just for SEO bullshit and I love it.
A perfect follow-up to the Travis Kalanick interview from a couple of weeks ago where he talks about pushing the boundaries of quantum physics using a chatbot and “vibe physics”.
Graphite is a rust-based vector editor. It’s only a web app right now (desktop apps coming later this year) but tbqh sometimes I’m just doing something so quick that it doesn’t need more than this. Handy!
A really lovely talk by graphic designer Chip Kidd about the thought process behind some of the book covers he’s designed, like Jurassic Park and IQ84. He’s such a character! I loved this.
Wait, sorry, I’m pretty sure I know how sex works but I’m confused - did the grandma get pregnant from that time she sucked off the grandad’s finger?
The allegories are a little heavy handed but there are still plenty of wtaf moments to make this worth your while.
Overstuffed (apols) with ideas and made with more love and enthusiasm than talent, but every scene contains at least one tiny delight. Michael Moriarty’s Mo Rutherford is a spectacular creation.
She is five. She does not speak in sentences yet, but she knows how to answer a joke with a smirk. She organizes her markers by color, then chaos, then color again. She plays baseball without rules, which is probably the right way to play it. She hums when she’s thinking. She hums a lot.
This is beautiful.
Watched this for family movie night. My 9-year-old loved it and got really into it. My 7-year-old is now questioning every aspect of his reality.
A rousing success.