And as do I.camazotz said:Please don't be so insulting; he's got a right to his opinion, as much as you do. I thought the same thing, myself: Expendables is by definition a type of geek entertainment, because it revels in presenting old action hero stars in a common film, exploiting the tropes of its particular genre. It's not the same kind of movie as Scott Pilgrim, by any stretch, but you don't have to fill a film up with ridiculous video game references, young actors, and loads of ridiculous nonsensical special effects to qualify for geek-dom*. There are layers here, many of them; that's why I think Movie Bob's article is only reflecting a basic fact that's been overlooked: to be geek is not to be united.The Stonker said:Sorry I need to defend this movie and say.Sicamat said:Isn't The Expendables as much as a geek movie as Scott Pilgrim VS. The World?
Fuck you.
The expendables is a cliché action movie with B rated actors, even the explosions aren't that nice.
While Scott Pilgrim is creative and actually focuses on something except for explosions.
Really don't put Scott Pilgrim and The expendables in the same room, why? Because the expendables is a movie for the masses, while Scott can be enjoyed by everyone and the geek will understand more of the jokes.
But you get the point.
* may or may not be accurate as I haven't seen either film. But I am a geek, even though I couldn't give a rat's patootie about Scott Pilgrim; it's not catering to my specific brand of geek (or age): D&D playing Sci Fi junkie with a couple hundred games from Steam.
Climate reacts to whatever forces it to change at the time. Humanity is now the dominating force. It is obviously true that past climate change was caused by natural forcings. However, to argue that this means we can?t cause climate change is like arguing that humans can't start bushfires because in the past they have happened naturally. Greenhouse gas increases have caused climate change many times in Earth's history, and we are now adding greenhouse gases to the atmosphere at a increasingly rapid rate.dathwampeer said:Yeah... sure.
I guess all the drastic climate changes that happened before we even existed. Never mind before our industrial revolution just never happened ay?
"DAMN YOU PERMIAN EVIDENCE... for foiling my clever strawman!!!!!!"
What? debatable? Source [http://tigger.uic.edu/~pdoran/012009_Doran_final.pdf]Did we have an effect on Natural climate change? Hmmmm debatable. But possible.
Reality? Here's a nice simple picture to sum it up:Did we cause it? Fuck no. What hippie world do you live in?
Naturally emitted CO2 is kept in check by itself through a cycle of adding and removing CO2 from the atmosphere, Humanity only emits CO2, but we don't remove it like the natural effects, this causes it to build up over time.dathwampeer said:Some people still try to blame the entire thing on us.
I will conceit that it is probably likely we have had some effect on this natural shift. It may seem drastic by our standards. We've possibly sped up the change by like 100 years or something. I'd say that's looking at the top end of our effect.
To think that we have like this immense effect on the worlds climate. Like we caused it to shift a 1000 years to early or something. Well it just seems arrogant to me. To think that we actually influence it so much.
I'm not entirely convinced we've done much to it at all.
The main gas we're responsible for is of course co2.
Our contribution accounts for something like 5% of the total co2. Which accounts for something like 20% of the total GHG's. That doesn't amount to much.
Water vapour is the most dominant greenhouse gas. Water vapour is also the dominant positive feedback in our climate system and amplifies any warming caused by changes in atmospheric CO2. This positive feedback is why climate is so sensitive to CO2 warming.Water vapour is the largest one. Shall we start blaming the sea?
The IPCC (and Al Gore) may have exaggerated the extent of the consequences, but this doesn't mean that human activity causing global warming is completely bogus. Let's keep politics out of this, please. It's a scientific issue.RDubayoo said:Then the Climate Research Unit scandal happened, showing that the premise for man-made global warming is pure bunk.
No, sorry. For a long time I've been very doubtful about global warming being caused by human activity. Actually I was not comfortable defending either position, as we should be when we don't know enough about the issues involved. I thought, like you, that climate changes happened before in the world's history, so the present fluctuations couldn't mean much. They could possibly not even be caused by human interference.dathwampeer said:I guess all the drastic climate changes that happened before we even existed. Never mind before our industrial revolution just never happened ay?
"DAMN YOU PERMIAN EVIDENCE... for foiling my clever strawman!!!!!!"
Did we have an effect on Natural climate change? Hmmmm debatable. But possible.
Did we cause it? Fuck no. What hippie world do you live in?
Hell, I'll take it if the boxshot has as nice a picture of Sandra Bullock's ass as the last one did.MovieBob said:And if they can't? Ah, well. Good times are fleeting. Blind Side 2, anyone?
Well Karl Urban's signed on to make a new one. I don't know who's directing, but Karl Urban's presence fills me with some confidence.Vkmies said:And now, before the row is over, they need to make a good Judge Dredd movie.
Hopefully with Judge Death and Luna 1. And especially Walter.
*smashes head into keyboard* I didn't say it was more intelligent, just said better and more entertaining, the watchmen was a boring, immature adaptation of a great comic, with a script that missed the point and landed on its nose, a comic that was lauded for being a serious take on superheroes degenerated to a hyper stylized blue screen 300 derivative, the action was dull, and excruciatingly boring, with acting ranging from good to mediocre. True the dark knight was little more then good vs evil, but it sure as hell wasn't boring.dathwampeer said:What exactly was intelligent about the Dark Knight?gurall200 said:The watchmen is more intelligent and grittier then batman, hell no, it was adapted with all the mindset of a 13 year old whom favorite movie is 300, anything intelligent was thrown out, wasn't bad, but The Dark Knight was a much better film.
OT: it's too be expected honestly, people are eventually going to get tired of superhero movies and all things geeky (or micheal sera), in about 20 years it will come back and then go away after a few years, just like 3D.
The only actual intelligence it had to offer was the whole collapse of archetypal good and evil... And that wasn't even done particularly well. It seemed way too rushed and tacked on at the end.
People over egg that film. It was good. But without Ledgers performance it would have been extremely forgettable.
I much preffered Watchmen. I thought it was better than the book. It dealt with all the same issues. Made the over all feel of the story much darker (that was just aesthetics though) and got rid of that retarded ending with the squiggly tentacle monster.
I thought it had much more to say than the Dark knight did.
If you're referring to the the 1500 year climate cycle, then it is a issue of heat distribution, and not temperature rise. It has been observed mainly through ice core data as a warming in the northern hemisphere matched at precisely the same time by a cooling in the southern hemisphere. basically a see-saw effect. When talking global warming we are talking about the rapid increase in global temperature over the last 200 years, which are known to be man made.dathwampeer said:Not true. The climate follows a predictable pattern throughout the Epochs. A pattern that we haven't broken.
See above.The Earth's climate is constantly in flux. Events that happen on it's surface do have an effect. Such as rise in certain gases. But for us to have actually caused the climate change, would suggest that it wasn't already going to happen. This is where the science doesn't back you up.
No, I think it's pretty guaranteed that we have had an effect.What's debatable is exactly how much effect we've had.
If you can't understand that naturally emmited CO2 is balanced by itself, while human emitted CO2 is not, then this discussion is pointless.No they do not!The first four pieces of evidence show that humans are raising CO2 levels:
1. Humans are currently emitting around 30 billion tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere.
2. Oxygen levels are falling as if carbon is being burned to create carbon dioxide.
3. Fossil carbon is building up in the atmosphere. (We know this because the two types of carbon have different chemical properties.)
4. Corals show that fossil carbon has recently risen sharply.
Humans contribution to the total GHG's is less than 1 percent of the total GHG. If you honestly think that is enough to have a drastic effect on the rate of climate change then this discussion is pointless.
Actually we can even recognize that the rising CO2 in the atmosphere is from fossil fuels through isotope analysis (source [http://www.bgc.mpg.de/service/iso_gas_lab/publications/PG_WB_IJMS.pdf])We account for something close to 3% of the total co2 in the atmosphere. That is hardly anything. Not enough to have the effect you propose.
Water vapor is a function of heat which is a function of CO2. It effectively amplifies any temp increase from CO2.That's just a breakdown of how greenhouse gases work. If there is more co2 than normal then of-course the heat that corresponds to co2 absorption will be escaping less.Another two observations show that CO2 is trapping more heat:
5. Satellites measure less heat escaping to space at the precise wavelengths which CO2 absorbs.
6.Surface measurements find this heat is returning to Earth to warm the surface.
Point 6. That's called the greenhouse effect. That's how all greenhouse gasses work, not just co2. Water vapour still plays the deciding factor as far as GHG's are concerned.
Your involvement is the almost the most documented part of this whole thing. the sheer number of evidence is so staggering I can only link to it, because it would fill up this whole thread. so giant mountain of evidence [http://www.skepticalscience.com/its-not-us-advanced.htm]:/ I'm not denying the involvement of greenhouse gases in climate change. Just our proposed involvement in the levels of greenhouse gasses.
Again, naturally emitted CO2 is balanced, our emission is not.We are NOT the domination source in greenhouse gases. methane produced by cows plays a larger total percentage in GHG emissions than our co2 production.
Our involvement in the whole thing has been severely overplayed.
The major effect that we do have on climate change is not through our emissions but to how we change the landscape. For instance there is thought that our keeping of livestock has caused a boom in their species population. As I said their methane release dwarfs our co2 emissions. This could be considered a natural effect though. Because even though we're responsible for increasing their population through farms, it's something that is also seen naturally. Dinosaurs for instance would have released much larger quantities during their life.
The one we really have to hold our hands up to is deforestation. That's had a larger impact than any other single cause that we're responsible for.
Greenhouse emissions are a relatively small and inconsequential point to the argument that we're responsible.
source [http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/greenhouse_data.html]
I don't think climate scientists are "very divided" about this.dathwampeer said:Put simply. Science is very divided on our actual involvement on GHG emission.
We are just unfortunate enough to be in a time when a climate shift was inevitable. Our involvement is very arguable. It was always something that was going to happen. How much we've changed the timing is debatable. I'd be surprised if it's over 100 years.
Climate change is a constant. GHG's play a part in that constant. Our contribution to the current level of GHG's is relatively small.
He then goes on to say that some other meta-study mentioned the existence of 3% of studies rejecting the man-made climate change hypothesis, and then goes on to verify these. In the end, he found no evidence for studies rejecting the hypothesis, and the author of the previous meta-study retracted his conclusions and said he had found only one publication rejecting the hypothesis, and it was an editorial, not a scientific paper.The consensus among climate researchers is outlined by the report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change:
This conclusion is endorsed by the National Academy of Sciences, The American Meteorological Society, the American Geophysical Union and its parent organization, the American Institute of Physics, the national science academies of the G8 nations, Brazil, China, and India. and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.Human activities ... are modifying the concentration of atmospheric constituents ... that absorb or scatter radiant energy. Most of the observed warming over the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations.
The consensus was quantified in a Science study by Prof. Naomi Oreskes (Dec. 2004) in which she surveyed 928 scientific journal articles that matched the search [global climate change] at the ISI Web of Science. Of these, according to Oreskes, 75% agreed with the consensus view (either implicitly or explicitly), 25% took no stand one way or the other, and none rejected the consensus.
We were indeed! Laugh out loud.370999 said:We are going with the second one right? The everything being crap?
I would argue that opera is not the least bit high-brow and that cinema is merely more financially accessible. Opera is just associated with the upper class as are certain films and accordingly can have either positive or negative connotations to different people. Some people will view Opera as pretentious whereas others will think the opposite. I've never been to an Opera, in fact the closest I've ever come to attending one was watching a Frasier episode involving it!The opoint is that unlike say, opera, films and cinema going are universal in appeal and don't especially appeal to braniacs or Johny idiot. Particular films might but as a whole I don't think you can say so.
I believe the subject is far simpler than you think. There are basic tenements to making films, I wouldn't go as far as to call them rules but there are things that just work! I'm glad you said that "Laurence of Arabia" was a good movie and then said "but I didn't really like it". This means you know exactly what I'm getting at. As I've said before, and this is my main point, if a film is well made with good editing, direction, pacing and storytelling then whether someone likes it or not is irrelevant, it is not subjective, it is an objective fact that it is good!We come into a tricky subject here though, how do we view something as good or bad? This is a seperate (though related) issuse to what we like. An example for me is the film "Laurence of Arabia" is a great film IMHO, but I'm not sure how much I would like it, I could only watch it once and I admired the filmmaking but didn't warm to it.
"Date Movie" is IMHO a horrible unfunny film but I'm sure someone would argue that it was a cinematic triumph (though they might happen to be the directors). My problem is how do I prove the primacy of my opinion over there's? I don't think I can so ultimately my opinion is limited to myself, rather obviously actually but so was the wheel.
Goodness me yes! Just by looking at someone you know exactly what music they listen to, what films they claim to like and so on. Most people know this and accordingly appear as they wish to be judged. Which is a pain in the arse for me as I have long hair and everyone naturally assumes I listen to Metallica and jump to all kinds of conclusions about me before they even talk to me and realise that I don't like only what they think I like but in fact anything that is good. And what is good to me? As I said above. The youth of today want to be segregated and immediately identified as a member of a faction. I do not, though it doesn't stop people from doing so.How bizarre. These people actually exist? I thought they were some hyper idealised version of teenage life where clans were created to make dramatic tension ("Oh no she's dating outside here clique, jow could she?").
Yes. And I do believe it's healthy to be a skeptic, instead of jumping on bandwagons because your favorite celebrity/politician says something. It's important to try and get informed about things.dathwampeer said:http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/Eco/climate-change-debate-climatologists-meteorologists-divided-global-warming/story?id=10447809&page=1
They even go as far as to suggest climate change isn't happening. (not something I agree with)
I'm just pointing out that our proposed level of involvement is in no way certain.
The more I've read into though over these last few days the more unsure I've become. I'm still not entireley convinced that we're playing as a large a part as we're being told. But it's made me go do some more research on it. Which is always a good thing.
The difference is obvious: climatologists agree; "trusted names in the weather business" don't. So, we should trust weather announcers over climatologists? Who doesn't agree with man-made global warming?While most climatologists agree that humans are driving global warming -- literally, in some respects, because of our reliance on fossil fuels -- some of the most trusted names in the weather business don't buy it.
Oh, so nevermind the scientists, the weather guys are telling there's no global warming. The piece really does that, it really puts both opinions on the same level. It's not a good sample of the opposing view at all.John Coleman, the founder of "The Weather Channel" and the original weatherman on "Good Morning America," has spoken out with his belief that climate change is a myth.
...
Other television weathermen tend to doubt that man has anything to do with it.
I can't fault you for being skeptical, as long as you'll check it out.dathwampeer said:Alright I'm not to big to admit that I've not actually done any research on this in a long time. And I will take a closer look at the links provided.DayDark said:snip
I'm still not entirely convinced about our proposed level of involvement though.
I don't know, at one point they talked about having the highest temperatures in 800.000 years, could be an individual review paper that had taken that into account and not the site.There are a lot of things these sites aren't taking into consideration. For one thing they are only taking the last 600 000 years or so into consideration. It's pretty much accepted that there are large shifts in climates over very large periods of time. And within those large periods of time there are many smaller fluctuations. I had always understood it to be that we were simply leaving this set of fluctuations.
I agree, which is why it should not be used alone as evidence, but I haven't seen that it is.Also atmosphere trapped in ice isn't 100% indicative of the true levels of a time period. Even in ice the sample will degrade.
As long as you read them I'm fine, remember that most of the questions have a basic, a intermediate, and sometimes an advanced answer. If you want whole deep in detail explanation, you should pick the intermediate or advanced answer.But I will read through these links thoroughly. Whilst maintaining my scepticism.
It's probably also worth noting there are a lot discussions going on in the comments section of those 121 arguments. People still aren't totally in agreement.
Well said! Inception was the best science fiction of the year so far and likely will be the best of 2010. I don't mind super hero stuff but even I am getting tired of the limited appeal. I would not be broken up if the Supers cleared the stage for more good science fiction. I did enjoy SPvstW but it was not really a super hero movie as I see them. I can see the case that it was I just don't buy it.Falseprophet said:I would argue this is not so much the rise and decline of geek culture, but the rise and decline of comic book superhero culture. Science fiction, fantasy and horror have all been fairly successful genres of film and television since at least the 1950s, and especially since the mid-70s. They go through cycles of popularity and obscurity as well, but tend to bounce back in some way, even if it's a new subgenre. Inception is by any definition of the word, a science-fiction film, and it was immensely popular, and wasn't based on a comic book or video game. It's like Nolan made a cerebral sci-fi film of ideas from the 1970s, but with modern special effects and good acting.
The past 10-15 years have been the first real successful iteration of superhero stories in mainstream film after so many fits and starts. Partly because the technology is finally there to render them, and partly because filmmakers who grew up with them are now making movies. But it was going to end eventually, because superhero stories have limited appeal.
Why? Bob brought this up tangentially in one of his Game Overthinker videos, but basically comic books have been catering to the same 25-50 year old male demographic since the mid-80s, and indulging way too much in the "grim and gritty" anti-hero stories of the 1990s Dark Age. These are not how you cultivate the next generation of comic book fans. Luckily, the current and upcoming class of comics creators seem to get it, most recently and notoriously, Darwyn "stop catering to the perverted needs of 45 year old men" Cooke [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgMZl0FJsx4], but also the Marvel Adventures line, the more recent DCU animated adaptations, and so on. So even if the current trend for capes peters out in the next year or so, hopefully we'll see it rise again in another decade when today's preteen fans become the media tastemakers.
Shia?MovieBob said:Nah, I dunno that there's any need to "concede" anything. It's a complicated dynamic.Falseprophet said:There's probably something to be said for "mainstream pandering, but ultimately positive portrayal" vs. "well-written, realistic and fair but with fringe appeal".
So I'll concede the point. Keep up the good work, Bob!
The original creators of "Xena" said that they dropped broad implications of 'gay' subtext into the show because it was just 'what you do' in self-aware, just-for-fun fantasy/action material involving amazonian heroines. When it got back to them later that the show had developed a HUGE lesbian following who'd adopted the characters as non-ironic icons, they opted to start pushing the envelope with it. "For the boys" exploitation turns "for the greater good" character development - happens more often with more causes than anyone wants to admit. How many men, in the 1960s, became suddenly "cool" with Feminism because Feminist women seemed more 'fun' and sexually/personally outgoing?