The Sky is Falling Complaint Thread

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  • Charlie JudgeCharlie Judge Posts: 12,804

    Blando Calrissian said:

    Complaint: Amazon scaring me by sending me a text and an email telling me something was delivered to my address, when it wasn't there. Too soon between text and me checking for the porch pirates to have swept in.

    Non-complaint: Amazon sending a second email today telling me that the same something was "being shipped" and would arrive on the original date, Thursday.

    I try to give them some slack as it's the most ridiculous time of year for them, but I also like actually getting things I paid for.

    TBH these days I get more and more tempted to adopt an attitude of "if I can't find it in a physical store, I might as well not buy it." Daz purchases notwithstanding, of course.

    Best to go to Amazon and check your order to see what 'Track Shipment' says. If it says it was delivered then you may have to contact Amazon customer service. 

  • GordigGordig Posts: 10,105

    Sometimes when I'm sick, my throat fills up with phlegm and my voice gets really deep. When that happens, I frequently find myself randomly moaning like an ent.

  • Sfariah DSfariah D Posts: 26,381

    Sometimes I feel like I have turrets or something that causes me to say a 4 letter word randomly.
     

    It is offensive to some.  Probably because I'm not saying it right.  Pronunciation is right but the meaning is wrong.

    MEOW!  I attached a picture of an individual who knows the right meaning of meow but won't teach me how to use it right.

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  • TJohnTJohn Posts: 11,156

    "Meow." Is a statement.

    "Meow?" Is a question.

    "Meow!" Means "Feed me now!"

    HTH.

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 11,576
    edited December 5

    Continuing Weather Complaint:  Rained last night, and now it's snowing again, and predictions are for alternating periods of snow and rain and cold.  18 inches of snow has turned into 4 inches of glacier lasagna.frown  and the driveway is pure ice.sad

    Non-complaint:  I've not yet absolutely needed to go out into the world.  My plan of stocking up on food for the winter has paid off.yes  I could last through February if my can opener doesn't break.indecision

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • WinterMoonWinterMoon Posts: 2,001
    edited December 5

    LeatherGryphon said: Shall we discuss various Miss Marples?smiley 

    I'm up for it, but we're gonna need a whole new thread. surprise Because "WM can't shut up and stop typing" is a thing that happens when I talk about interests. blushcrying (Like the cryptid tangent in my art thread. I don't really believe in most cryptids, I just love them.) I watch the Misses Marple in a specific way. First the original BBC Joan Hickson version, then the ITV remake, back to back in the chronological order of the original show. It feels like seeing how the same case played out in two parallel time-bands. laugh

    Yes, I'm a British Mystery fan.

    Me too! It's my number one favourite genre to watch, so much so that I developed a British accent to my English (I usually speak Norwegian) in my early 20s. Before that, I sounded very American, apparently. I've watched all of Morse, Dalziel & Pascoe (Edit: Have I?), Ripper Street and the original Dalgliesh, most of Poirot, Miss Marple, A Touch of Frost, Inspector Lynley, Sherlock, Heartbeat, Midsomer Murders (Yes, silly, but I love it.) and a bit of most others: Lewis, Endevour, Taggart, The Bill, Marple (2000s), Father Brown, etc.

    One of my favorite TV series is "Vera", played by Brenda Blethyn.  So many recognizably tragic people.  The plots are very engaging and sympathetic.  And I love the theme music.yes

    I watched the first series a long time ago. It must have been in the 2010-2015 period, so I don't remember any of the plots. I do remember that I loved the character of Vera. The theme is.... atmospheric? Evokative? It sounds like the composer was grieving. My musical terminology is woeful and almost zero, although my best friend is trying to educate me a bit.

     

    Post edited by WinterMoon on
  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 11,576
    edited December 5

    The original, older "Inspector Morse" is another of my favorites.  And its spinoffs "Endevor" and "Lewis".  I like the older Morse because he was so different than his position in the police would have suggested.  Above the politics & corruption, aloof, sophisticated, inquisitive, intelligent.  Happy with, or at least resigned to life, yet sad in some way.   Not something one finds expressed well in American series.

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • I have a great fondness for 'Vera'. The actress Brenda Blethyn (think that's the right spelling) lives within 40 miles of me here in Kent in the SE of England, but her accent is spot on in the series. Northumbrian accents change from valley to valley, and I'm convinced Vera's accent is from 'High Newton by the Sea'. When we stopped there on holiday, one lady sounded identical to Vera. In similar shops in Craster a few miles to the south and Bambrough to the north, the accent was different. I really admire the actress. Regards, Richard.
  • WinterMoonWinterMoon Posts: 2,001
    edited December 5

    LeatherGryphon said:

    The original, older "Inspector Morse" is another of my favorites.  And its spinoffs "Endevor" and "Lewis".  I like the older Morse because he was so different than his position in the police would have suggested.  Above the politics & corruption, aloof, sophisticated, inquisitive, intelligent.  Happy with, or at least resigned to life, yet sad in some way.   Not something one finds expressed well in American series.

    I feel like American shows, at least newer ones, focus a lot more on the procedures and technology that go into solving a case than you find in British shows, and the science stuff is still complete bunk according to people who know about forensics. Maybe they're more accurate in how they portray the actual policing side of the job, because Americans who are fans of British "cozy crime" always remark on how much the British TV detectives break the law. (Walking straight into someone's house with no warrent, see that they're not home and starting rifling through their drawers, is pretty common behaviour for some of them.) The British don't seem to care as much about perfect accuracy, but more about telling a good story with mystery and suspense. Plotlines tend to be very character driven. Midsomer, which has some of the most bonkers plots ever seen on TV, usually have all the calamities of the episode happen precisely because the characters are the way they are. Then you have Scandi Noir, which is just about making the audience feel as uncomfortable as possible.

    Funny enough, I used to think that Inspector Morse was a fairly typical English police inspector, just one who had a snazzier car than average. It was one of the first "not for kids" shows I was allowed to watch, because it's so rarely violent, and I didn't have many characters to compare him to. Poirot is a private investigator and Lovejoy is an antiques dealer, and those were the two others I was familiar with at that age. My Mom had this idea that all the English (not the Scottish and Welsh) were either entirely "stiff" or basically a coal miner. She thought Jack from A Touch of Frost was refreshing because he's fairly unpolished. That, and he's the OG Pop Larkin.

    richardandtracy said:

    I have a great fondness for 'Vera'. The actress Brenda Blethyn (think that's the right spelling) lives within 40 miles of me here in Kent in the SE of England, but her accent is spot on in the series. Northumbrian accents change from valley to valley, and I'm convinced Vera's accent is from 'High Newton by the Sea'. When we stopped there on holiday, one lady sounded identical to Vera. In similar shops in Craster a few miles to the south and Bambrough to the north, the accent was different. I really admire the actress. Regards, Richard.

    I have a bit of trouble picking up what she says, sometimes. laugh There's a really funny Christmas(?) special where she meets Inspector Chandler from Whitechapel, and he can't understand a word she says because he's this posh London guy. I tried to find it on Youtube, but I didn't have much luck.

    Post edited by WinterMoon on
  • kyoto kidkyoto kid Posts: 41,106

    Sfariah D said:

    Sometimes I feel like I have turrets or something that causes me to say a 4 letter word randomly.
     

    It is offensive to some.  Probably because I'm not saying it right.  Pronunciation is right but the meaning is wrong.

    ...do you mean Tourette Syndrome?  

     

  • KinichKinich Posts: 882

    Ah, British Mystery Series, I must at this point confess to being a fan, and British, though ironically I had until recently never watched Morse. Lewis, Endeavour and numerous others but never Morse until recently whilst looking for something to watch realised that the entire Morse back-catalogue is available for free on itvX the streaming service for ITV (for the non-Brits ITV is a free to air commercial funded TV company), now on series 2. Watched the earlier Midsomer Murders and I must admit they did get a bit mad at times, not really watched since John Nettles (of Bergerac fame) left.

    As it happens I have worked briefly with a retired British Police Inspector who took up a 2nd career after retiring from the force, and there was a definite touch of the ‘Morse’ about him with regards to attitude to the strict letter of the law etc. Probably an age thing as I suspect a modern Police Inspector would not get away with such behaviour, not that I’ve had much to do with the police in an official capacity.

    Another worth watching is Foyle’s War, set in Hastings during and just after the 2nd World War.

  • Sfariah DSfariah D Posts: 26,381

    kyoto kid said:

    Sfariah D said:

    Sometimes I feel like I have turrets or something that causes me to say a 4 letter word randomly.
     

    It is offensive to some.  Probably because I'm not saying it right.  Pronunciation is right but the meaning is wrong.

    ...do you mean Tourette Syndrome?  

     

    Yes!!!! 

  • WinterMoonWinterMoon Posts: 2,001
    edited December 6

    Kinich said: Watched the earlier Midsomer Murders and I must admit they did get a bit mad at times, not really watched since John Nettles (of Bergerac fame) left.

    There are four "ages" to the John Nettles (Tom Barnaby) era of the show, informally named by yours truly: The Early Days, the Golden Age, the Bonkers Age, and the Rocky Road to Retirement. I'm not going to write a 2000 word essay about them here, as tempting as it is. All I'm going to say is that I love the sheer crazy of the late-mid Nettles episodes.

    For those who have never seen Midsomer Murders, it's known for two things. A: It's rural, beautiful and vibrant, and has a homicide rate that would make Gangster Age Chicago say ouch. B: The main character retired in 2011, and was replaced by his cousin. After that a lot of people lost interest.

    The "new" Barnaby is divisive, and there are purists who pretend the show ended with Nettles' departure. (There was also a controversy, but I'm not going into that. Ugly.) Anyway, towards the end of John Nettles' run there was a pretty high turnover of writers, and the style and quality of the scripts were variable. When you look at the ranking of episodes from best to worst, you'll see that a lot of the least popular ones are from the tail end of the Nettles era. There are also some absolute firecrackers from that period, that hold up really well. The highs and lows of series 11-13 are jarring, which is why I describe it as a rocky road. That road continues well into the Neil Dudgeon (John Barnaby) episodes, and combined with Dudgeon's very different type of screen presence from Nettles (There's.... less of it.) it wasn't an easy transition. The show eventually found a new track, and it's still good in its own right, it's just a completely different show.

    Post edited by WinterMoon on
  • NylonGirlNylonGirl Posts: 1,858

    WinterMoon said:

    It annoys me that there's (currently?) no way to record dreams, because there's a lot of stuff I want to see with my real eyes.

    For remembering images, I think the human brain may be very similar to the AI image generators. I think the memories may be more abstract than we realize. Like, when the AI images sometimes produce an image that looks like what it’s supposed to but it has obvious flaws. As an example, I once saw an image that was supposed to be a “fast food” meal. It mimicked the appearance of a McDonald’s meal. But there were abnormalities such as a drink cup filled with french fries instead of a drink, or a drinking straw that is near the cup but not in contact with it. And there are the notorious flaws of hands with too many fingers and strange looking feet. One might not notice right away.

    Often the abstract image looks similar to the intended image. From a distance the cup (with french fries in it and the straw floating in the air) might look like a cup of lemonade with a straw in it. If one were to look at a perfect source image next to the newly generated image, they may look very similar as measured by a machine, even though their content is significantly different as measured by a human. And the main focal point of the image is often fairly accurate.

    I think our own memories might also have such anomalies. Maybe the things we see in dreams or in our memories have the same hands with too many fingers or drinks the straw not touching the drink cup, but we don’t notice it because we only see the main focal point of the memories and not the edges of the image. Maybe if we try to remember a hand or a foot then we retrieve a different memory where the hand or foot was the focal point and we see a much better image of them.

    So maybe if we were able to save these images from people’s brains digital images then they would look just as odd as the AI images because we see everything rather than what the person was focused on. But maybe it would be possible to extract different images from the same scene and put them together to make a high quality image. I don’t know.

  • GordigGordig Posts: 10,105

    Sfariah D said:

    Sometimes I feel like I have turrets or something that causes me to say a 4 letter word randomly.
     

    It is offensive to some.  Probably because I'm not saying it right.  Pronunciation is right but the meaning is wrong.

    Contrary to popular belief, Tourette's is not characterized by a compulsion to profanity (although that can be a side effect for people who struggle suppressing their tics).

  • Sfariah DSfariah D Posts: 26,381

    Gordig said:

    Sfariah D said:

    Sometimes I feel like I have turrets or something that causes me to say a 4 letter word randomly.
     

    It is offensive to some.  Probably because I'm not saying it right.  Pronunciation is right but the meaning is wrong.

    Contrary to popular belief, Tourette's is not characterized by a compulsion to profanity (although that can be a side effect for people who struggle suppressing their tics).

    oops. I think someone told me before but I forgot. 

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 11,576
    edited December 7

    Non-complaint:  Wheee... finally a day without any prediction of snow or rain.  Cold yes (23F), but the sky is not falling.yes  And tommorow too.smiley

    Complaint:  Because of the inconveniently scheduled weather, I'm long past my laundry day.  I'm at the bottom my underwear drawer and using my old 3X-Large gear that was 60 pounds ago.  Paperclips might help.frown  So, laundry is definitely on the agenda ASAP.

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • WinterMoonWinterMoon Posts: 2,001

    Complaint: One of those big boi nerves that go down the leg has been sending out itching signals. It started in the thigh, and has moved up to the left side of my lower torso. It suddenly dawned on me where the expression "scratching the surface" comes from. Very useless indeed.

  • Sfariah DSfariah D Posts: 26,381

    I ordered this for my mum for Christmas.  I'm pretty sure she won't eat it, but instead she would offer it to Oscar and Misty.

    Misty and Oscar both love cat stuff including cat treats.  They never claim to be cats but they can convince a vet that they are both cats.

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  • TJohnTJohn Posts: 11,156
    edited December 7

    Sfariah D said:

    I ordered this for my mum for Christmas.  I'm pretty sure she won't eat it, but instead she would offer it to Oscar and Misty.

    Misty and Oscar both love cat stuff including cat treats.  They never claim to be cats but they can convince a vet that they are both cats.

    My cats, Miss Earl, and her brother Bob, like Temptations "Catnip Fever." They are litter mates, both gray tabbies, although Bob is a Manx body type with a natural bob tail and Miss Earl is lithe with a long and very expressive tail. Earl is the evil one. devil

     

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  • WinterMoonWinterMoon Posts: 2,001

     

    These two rascals are Sandra (1st of April 1996 - 8 th of Aug 2012), and Rufus (18th of May 1995 - 1st of Oct 2012). They were lovable terrors, and I miss them so much. broken heart heart

  • Sfariah DSfariah D Posts: 26,381

    For the ink spill picture, I first see Chtulla not an elephant or faces.  What do you see?

    for the animal, I see a mudskipper!

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  • NylonGirlNylonGirl Posts: 1,858

    I see two vaginas.

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 11,576

    I see an Ood.

  • NylonGirlNylonGirl Posts: 1,858

    McGyver said:

    I have stupid dreams...

    Occasionally I'll have elaborate episodic dreams which are part of a long playing story arc that can take months or in the cases of some storylines, years to play out... but when they do pick up again, it's generally where I left off... a lot (most) of them are puzzle-like (like the Myst games) and can take place across different timelines and realities...

    One that finally got the funding for some new episodes just randomly occurred one night a couple of months ago, with me having to go back to an elevator in a basement of collapsed building I last visited in the dream three years ago... after finding my way back there, everything was where it was last, except when I got the elevator door open, the interior of the elevator was brand new and the door on the opposite side was ajar and opened into what appeared to be a busy department store in the 1950s... by that point in the dream I realized it was morning already in real life and I decided it was too much trouble to start a new level so close to waking up, so I declined entering the elevator and proceeding into the 1950s (often in puzzle dreams you have to be careful about one way portals... if you enter one that connects to a different timeline or reality, you can't go back the same way... it gets complicated and requires figuring out how to get back to that previous point)... so instead I wrote a note to myself (with my dream Sharpie) on the door of elevator in the current reality/level in case it takes a long time until my brain can get funding for the next episode... it's been several months, so I hope nobody removes the note...
    Which in this case is a problem because I didn't remember to consciously leave the dream, instead I started looking around the area outside the elevator and just woke up... that sometimes leads to time passing in the dream the same as in the real world... so when I next have the dream, a year may have passed both in-dream as well as in the real world... now instead of picking up exactly where I left off I might be somewhere far away, doing something else and have to find my way back to a location that may not be the same anymore.

    That particular dream isn't very epic so far and I'm not pleased with the writing staff... maybe it'll get more interesting as it develops. 

    One thing about those dreams is you tend not to feel very well rested in the morning.

    This definitely sounds like a sentient lathe. Or perhaps a more complex device with a lathe as an appendage. Or maybe a very unusual human being.

    Anyway, none of my dreams would get funding. They’re all independent productions.

    But when I try to figure out what my dreams mean, I try to determine what situation in my real life feels the same way as the dream. And I assume the dream is related to that. And since I assume I am to some degree similar to other entities that interact with humans, I assume that is how it works for others too. So I often wonder what unique situations people might have to cause them to have such intriguing dreams.

    A woman who looked like Taylor Swift and tried to use me until I had nothing left to take, once told me about how she often dreamed she found herself in the same very small town and always ended up forcefully confined to a small area in this town. She didn’t actually say this was a recurring dream. She asked if I ever had recurring dreams exactly like that, and asked in a way that made me assume this was happening to her. I assumed it was because of her tendencies I was able to observe, in which she shut out much of the people around her because she either feared them, deemed them to have nothing she could use them for, or both. I believe her behavior and the resulting consequences were manifested in her dreams of her world being very small in the first place, and then becoming even more restricted.

    I don’t know where I was going with this. But nobody responded to the last two things I spent a long time typing so I don’t think I will spend any more time on this. Episodic puzzle game dreams that sometimes pick up where they left off are very interesting. I don't know if I've ever had a dream that continued from a previous dream.

  • TJohnTJohn Posts: 11,156

    "A dream should not mean, but be."

    Or is that a poem?

    Probably a poem. I think some poet said that.

  • kyoto kidkyoto kid Posts: 41,106
    edited December 9

    Sfariah D said:

    For the ink spill picture, I first see Chtulla not an elephant or faces.  What do you see?

    for the animal, I see a mudskipper!

    ...Dr. Zoidberg. 

    Post edited by kyoto kid on
  • Sfariah DSfariah D Posts: 26,381

    kyoto kid said:

    Sfariah D said:

    For the ink spill picture, I first see Chtulla not an elephant or faces.  What do you see?

    for the animal, I see a mudskipper!

    ...Dr. Zoidberg. 

     I can see him too.

     

    I am waiting for some packages to come in, especially a screw driver that I need to fix my sewing machine.  I also ordered a cabinet for my room but I don't know if it is lost or out for delivery or what?

    While trying to focus on organizing the area around my computer in my room, I am reisntalling Daz content and playing a game called Runescape 3.

  • Sfariah DSfariah D Posts: 26,381

    Does anyone know where my glasses are? 

    I want to do something but the only thing I feel like doing is taking a nap.  However at the same time I don't want a nap, but I do want a nap.  I don't know what to do!

  • DanaTADanaTA Posts: 13,224

    First, find your glasses!  (are they on your head?)  Then, take a nap!

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