MC_Fap_Commander
MC_Fap_Commander t1_j56ytju wrote
Reply to comment by Klin24 in PsBattle: swimming mask from 1920s by chandssss
That's an excellent deep cut. SMB2 is insufficiently loved.
MC_Fap_Commander t1_iube0b0 wrote
Reply to comment by BeatlesTypeBeat in Nostalgic website in 90s “Geocities” style for tracking Halloween movies 📼🎃 by rgthree
>netizen
Now there's a name I've not heard in a long, long time.
MC_Fap_Commander t1_iuaw581 wrote
Reply to comment by deathlydope in Nostalgic website in 90s “Geocities” style for tracking Halloween movies 📼🎃 by rgthree
It probably makes sense. Early internet was not user friendly or cheap so I think there was a bit of a selection bias in who used it. When online access was made as easy as tapping a phone button, a very different sort of population arrived online. They brought their identity biases with them. For a lot of us in the 90's, the internet was our identity.
MC_Fap_Commander t1_iuao1ru wrote
Reply to comment by fsociety091786 in Nostalgic website in 90s “Geocities” style for tracking Halloween movies 📼🎃 by rgthree
The collective sigh from the world as we appeared to move away from the threat of nuclear annihilation to the chance of a cooperative global system was pretty dope.
Autumn of 2001 to the headlines of today pretty much took away that delusion.
MC_Fap_Commander t1_iuandf2 wrote
Reply to comment by dirtynj in Nostalgic website in 90s “Geocities” style for tracking Halloween movies 📼🎃 by rgthree
That's certainly true, but the arrival of real world divisions also hurt the online space.
At that time, the internet was the tribe. Certainly some exceptions, but there was a general sense of commonality online back then. We were all still sort of the weirdos who made the place go.
As the internet became a widely used corporate mass media space, it seemed to lead to the hostility, acrimony, and division we see in the "real world." I wonder sometimes if the need for market segmentation was pushed online for purposes of creating advertising demographics.
MC_Fap_Commander t1_j6msyu3 wrote
Reply to comment by seadragon65 in Cindy Williams Dies: ‘Laverne & Shirley‘ Star Who Appeared In ’American Graffiti’ & ‘The Conversation’ Was 75 by MarvelsGrantMan136
"Well, I don't really think that the end can be assessed as of itself as being the end because what does the end feel like? It's like saying when you try to extrapolate the end of the universe, you say, if the universe is indeed infinite, then how - what does that mean? How far is all the way, and then if it stops, what's stopping it, and what's behind what's stopping it? So, what's the end, you know, is my question to you."
(EDIT: It's not a slight against the man; it's a quote from one of his most famous characters about mortality)