Honestly I find most food documentaries to be insufferable. I've never seen a popular one that genuinely takes the Columbian exchange, economic conditions or religion seriously as influences on cuisine, despite these three being perhaps the three biggest influences on modern day cuisines. It's often bullshit on how food was better in some preindustrial or even prehistorical time (just no), authenticity worship, "scientific" explanations or healthism.
i got genuinely angry because it was talking about how standard olive oil sucks and you should be getting olive oil made from olives that were personally caressed by italians when like... i just want to make the food taste good?
I like good olive oil, but I also buy refined olive oil on purpose. Sometimes all that a dish needs is the fat composition of olive oil to soak flavor from aromatic vegetables and spices and the neutral flavor of the oil itself is no great hindrance. This is great for good enough cooking.
I'll give a metaexplanation: liberalism, socialism and conservatism are all to an extent responses to trends in 17th century Britain. Socialism, conservatism and later fascism are all, in part, differing reactions to liberalism. The point is, things have been around for a long time by now and each tradition has lots of stuff in it. The messiness is essential and not accidental complexity.
There's also the fact that misunderstandings about what socialism is run rampart in politics. It's not when the government does things like the GOP says.
Y'all are a generally pretty smart and good group and I was wondering if you had Good Reading Resources for People Who Don't Know Things. I'd prefer reading resources that don't add emotional content and also try to provide details in a holistic manner.
I recommend giving a read to Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy on socialism. It fits your criteria, the encyclopedia is a peer reviewed resource and the article has, like, 100 works in its bibliography. It's also not a 19th century text like the ones socialists online often recommend. Stay away from YouTube for the moment being.
If you don't have experience reading philosophical texts, I recommend to:
reading slowly, very slowly. Briefly pause after each sentence, thinking about whether you've understood it. After each paragraph, try to summarize it, think how it's serving the text as a whole (its purpose) and anything that comes into your mind. This with section as well and finally the whole text.
return to earlier parts, if needed, liberally. It's not a novel. Later parts inform your understanding of earlier parts.
Taking notes is a pretty good practice, and also taking notes of the notes as a summary at the end of each section and trying to construct the essence of the argument.
The article might genuinely take 4-5 hours to read with my method, but that's ok.
I mean it's an encyclopedia article, so it's somewhat less bad to read casually, but imho this is step where people fuck up so why not do it right from the beginning?
My own personal take is that Sanders is as a private person a socialist, but he isn't running on a socialist platform for POTUS. He won't bring forth socialism (or make the world much closer to it), but if I were an American, I'd get involved in his campaign, but I see the movement as more important than any figureheads, including Sanders.
This was long because I'm procrastinating, but hopefully it's helpful.
I had similar vibes when I saw Juno (2008) for the first time last summer and it really felt like it was straight from the vault. All the symbolic things like the soundtrack and fashions, politics were early Obama era hopeful (despite the recession), teens were Facebookians rather than TikTokians. Seeing Ellen Page, who did a great job, act straight really jumped out. It was like she had been an antropologist watching straight culture from outside in her whole life and turning the results into performance.
I remember when it was a Cool comedy to see but none of my friends were interested in a pregnancy themed movie. Well, they were wrong.
I think these are related: valuing super unapproachable games has had a quite a bit of connection with worries about minorities getting into the pastime. Ergo, it's not a surprise to hear a tantrum like this after the failure of the title afterwards if the main problem was learn-to-swim-or-drown difficulty curve.
Moonside OP wrote
Reply to comment by neku in Why Do Recipe Writers Lie About How Long It Takes To Caramelize Onions? by Moonside
Honestly I find most food documentaries to be insufferable. I've never seen a popular one that genuinely takes the Columbian exchange, economic conditions or religion seriously as influences on cuisine, despite these three being perhaps the three biggest influences on modern day cuisines. It's often bullshit on how food was better in some preindustrial or even prehistorical time (just no), authenticity worship, "scientific" explanations or healthism.
I like good olive oil, but I also buy refined olive oil on purpose. Sometimes all that a dish needs is the fat composition of olive oil to soak flavor from aromatic vegetables and spices and the neutral flavor of the oil itself is no great hindrance. This is great for good enough cooking.