EP 2 Thoughts
Jiwoong talking about starting in BL dramas and the mentors feeling ~weird~ after his performance ššš. Iām actually kinda surprised they mentioned his roles. Keita is sooo good! What a voice and heās so sweet and charming. Sorry but I donāt care about the guy from Pentagon. Itās so obvious theyāre creating a redemption storyline for Han Yujin, but once again Iām not moved. The scenes where trainees cry after achieving their goals (moving up a star-level) really drove home what I love about the produce shows: being able to witness peopleās journeys to achieve their dreams. And last but not least, TOYONAGA TAKUTO!!!!ā¤ļø
I just watched the first episode of Boys Planet (I know I'm super late). I went in expecting little but was pleasantly surprised by the talent on display and the minimal scripted bits meant to boost so and so's popularity. My favorite trainees so far are Haruto and Sung Hanbin. My favorite moment was definitely Lip J and Hanbin tutting and whacking (played that part over and over again). I really felt like I was watching SDC; it was that good!
https://x.com/gyuivns/status/1621129034674614272?s=20
[241216] ģģ° Weverse Post Update
trans: carats, goodnightš
dreams about running in the woods (or were they forgotten memories?)
via
genuinely do think house hightower is cooler and more interesting than the targaryens, like dont get me wrong i like both but the hightowers take it. easily. their shadowy history of alchemy and necromancy, patronage of westeros' cultural and religious institutions, and big fuckass taller-than-the-wall lighthouse has bewitched me body and soul. dragons, blood magic, and a destabilising obsession with incest is all well and good - but institutional corruption and the delicate mastery of soft power? just too tasty. been on the wrong side of several wars and never lost a head or a penny from their main line because they know how to play the game. one of the richest houses in westeros and they know how to do it right ! funding the arts, sciences, faith. controlling the narrative. every message goes through the maesters, them and septas tutoring little lords and ladies, all roads lead to oldtown, and thats just how its done why would you even question it. how could you question it. and all the while the lord of the hightower sits up in the clouds in a tower built atop an unsettling ancient labyrinth of black stone, burning a flame that can be seen for miles, lighting the city every night. like good luck getting away with shit when theres no shadowy corners to hide in. the metaphor isnt subtle. every other house would wish they were the hightowers if they could conceptualise the higher plane this familys operating on.
The vast majority (around 80%) of Chinese characters are made up of a radical (the general meaning) and a phonetic.
Radical 儳 nĒ (woman) and phonetic 馬 mĒ (horse) = åŖ½ mÄ, mother (your mum sounds like a horse).
But a small minority are pictograms, that is to say a picture of the thing they represent.
Pictograms are the earliest characters, thousands of years old, but many are still used every day.
If you look at the oracle bone script for rat, tiger and elephant youāll see they are clearly pictures of the animal they signify.
But if you look at the modern versions, youāll notice something odd, theyāre all rotated 90 degrees onto their sides.
Why? Why are all these characters written with the animals balancing on their tails?
Well, itās for a straight-forward, practical reason.
For a couple thousand years before paper was invented writing materials were limited. We had silk (expensive), bronze (expensive and impractical), and oracle bones (religious use only).
And one moreā¦
That was cheap, plentiful, durable, and easy to erase and rewrite characters. The wonder that isā¦
Bamboo!
It was cut into strips, and tied into books. Long thin strips of bamboo contributed to the Chinese custom of writing vertically, from top to bottom (and right to left).
But it also meant that itās much easier to write some characters length-ways so that they easily fit onto the strip.
So thatās it, mystery solved. Thatās why a lot of Chinese picture characters are written at a right angle.