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    <title><![CDATA[Art, Music, and Literature &gt; earthli News 3.7]]></title>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2026 22:37:44 +0100</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[Art, Music, and Literature &gt; earthli News 3.7]]></title>
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    <guid>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5971</guid>
    <title><![CDATA[It's funny how dumb you are]]></title>
    <link>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5971</link>
    <pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2026 21:32:44 +0100</pubDate>
    <description><![CDATA[Published by marco on 20. Jan 2026 21:32:44
Updated by marco on 20. Jan 2026 22:37:44
------------------------------------------------------------------------

This isn't exactly my musical style -- metal is great but scream/growl metal has
yet to grow on me -- but I love the commitment in this video. Like, imagine
they're spitballing what the video's going to be like and someone says,

"Let's dub our song to what looks like an earnest but kinda lame, four-piece,
mariachi-looking band."

"Is that us? Is the band us?"

"Yeah, of course. Who else is gonna do it?"

"OK. Cool. But what if, and bear with me, aliens start abducting and replacing
band members?"

"What if that's us, too? Like, what if we're all dressed up in green alien suits
and we beat ourselves up as the song plays?"

"Yeah! And let's also do some breakdance moves in our little green suits."

"Suits can be whatever color you want, man. The video's gonna be in black and
white."

"Yeah, sure, but they gotta be green. And we'll end with,"

"It's funny how dumb you are."

[media]

And then they went out and filmed it. Like, they put on the suits, and pretended
to be the lame band, then they put on alien suits and abducted themselves. And
then they cut the video and still stuck to it. That is dedication to a shared
vision. That is art.

It is the shared experience that matters, not the superficial experience itself.
I was able to enjoy this on other levels than just the musical -- though their
enthusiasm makes the music grow on me, if I'm honest -- because they pulled me
into it with their own dedication to their vision, because they believe in it
enough to put a lot of work and time into it.

If this were an AI-generated video, would it be the same?

Possibly. Until I learned that it was an AI-generated video. Then, the illusion
is gone. All of the meta-levels collapse, disappear in a puff of smoke.

Then, there is nothing left of it but a moving image, a sound.

But that's not what makes this video fun or great.

Without those human things to scaffold it, this is just a bunch of noise and
nonsensical imagery.

We need a shared experience. We need consciousness.

If you can fake it well enough that I don't notice? Fine. I didn't notice but I
enjoyed it. I was able to build my palace in the sky without any substance. Good
for me! The experience is the experience.

But as soon as I notice, the illusion is gone and I'll feel cheated. I might
even get mad, for a minute. Am I mad at myself for having been scammed? Am I mad
at the creator for playing with my emotions?

How will I respond? Will I stop trusting so much that I can no longer let myself
enjoy anything for fear of looking stupid?

Maybe that's the significance of the coda to the video.

"It's funny how dumb you are."

[Weirdmaggedon]

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    <guid>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5973</guid>
    <title><![CDATA[On maybe going to see Avatar 3]]></title>
    <link>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5973</link>
    <pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2026 21:24:23 +0100</pubDate>
    <description><![CDATA[Published by marco on 20. Jan 2026 21:24:23
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[image]I don't trust the Critical Drinker (link below) that much, but his review
for the second Avatar movie rings absolutely true, so I can imagine that there's
a good chance that it applies to this one as well. I can't remember anything
about Avatar 2. I can't remember a single character's name.

I would fail a quiz on the Avatar films with a 0/10. I've seen both Avatars. I
might have seen the first one twice. I honestly can't remember. My notes reveal
that, even for the first one, which I saw in "2012"
<https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2665#Avatar> and should have
been excited about, I wrote,

"[...] so many of the characters are two-dimensional [...] The plot is pretty
simplistic, the battle scenes are much too long (without adding suspense or
additional pathos) but the graphics are stunning, even if some of the stuff is
just too colorful and cutesy-looking for my taste."

I saw the second one in "2023"
<https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4644#Avatar> -- which I only
remembered was called "The Way of Water" just now -- but I liked the second one
more. I read a lot more into the second one, started that review with,

"James Cameron hates people and capitalism and plundering and piracy and
globalism and hypernationalism and he probably hates the U.S. of A. more than a
bit but, most of all, he hates colonialism. He fucking hates colonialism. He
hates it so much that he’s made two giant blockbuster movies about it and
he’s going to make three more just to drill the point home that there is
nothing respectable about colonialism, that there is no justification for it,
that it is always morally wrong, that it is always extractive, that it is about
taking what you don’t think you have to pay for, about denigrating entire
species and races and animals as fodder for your egocentric machine."

[media]

The Critical Drinker writes about the new Fire and Ice movie.

"Fire and [ice] is abusively long. Especially when you realize the plot could be
easily condensed into like half that time. I'm not kidding. At least 50% of this
movie is nothing but a wanky tech demo. Just endless landscape and wildlife
shots that go on forever and accomplish absolutely nothing. A flamboyant $400
million screen-saver that adds nothing to the story or characters and bogs down
what's already a frustrating and repetitive narrative. I kid you not. Here,
characters get captured and taken hostage and have to be rescued on like four
different occasions."

"Visually it looks fantastic and all that, but it does suffer from the same
problem you always get with CGI. There's basically no weight or impact to
anything that happens because, you know, it was all just rendered on a computer.
Also, the scenes with Spider do kind of make me laugh. One, because the actor's
so fucking wooden, you can make a log cabin out of him. And two, because he's
the only physically real thing on screen, it's pretty obvious when everything
else around him is fake. As for the other characters, they're the usual one-note
walking cliches you'd expect from these movies. Generic protagonist is still
just a generic good guy trying to hold his family together and do the right
thing. Evil fire lady is evil and likes fire because the movie needed another
antagonist. I guess the kids are all a bunch of nothing-burgers to the point
where I struggle to even remember who was who."

"Here's a fun little drinking game you can play at home, kids. Have a careful
look at the human characters in Avatar. the brutal soldiers, the cruel whale
hunters, the evil corporate types, all the people you're supposed to hate, and
take a shot every time you spot a non-white actor on screen, even in the
backgrounds. I can pretty much guarantee you'll be stone cold sober by the end
of the movie. Why? Because there's none to be found here. And it's strange
because normally you can't move for the on-screen diversity in Disney movies,
which are determined to reflect the world we live in today. I wonder why they
dropped the ball so suddenly with this particular film. I wonder why they chose
to have this violent, destructive, expansionist, capitalist, militaristic
dictatorship represented almost entirely by one ethnic group. Well, I couldn't
possibly solve this mystery. Can you?"

I dunno. My review of the first one lined up with this one. My review of the
second one doesn't. Maybe I need to waste three hours of my life and see what's
up with the third one.

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