• You think he's good now?? Listen to his 2014 mixtape first, then talk

    You think he's good NOW?? Go listen to the 2014 mixtape first โ€” then come back and talk!! That tape โ€” the production density, the lyrical layering, the creative control before label involvement โ€” none of his commercial releases come close. He was still releasing under his government name, no commercial infrastructure, no format constraints. That period is his ceiling. The current output isn't bad โ€” it's optimised for streaming: short intros, anthemic hooks, predictable structure. Built for the algorithm. But if you only know the recent catalogue, you don't actually know this artist. You're missing the best part.

    ๐Ÿ’ฌ 3 Replies
  • Rotten Tomatoes 42% and audience score is 91%?? Critics are completely out of touch

    Rotten Tomatoes 42% and audience score is 91%?? The critics are completely disconnected from what people actually want!! RT score measures what percentage of critics gave a positive review โ€” it is not a measure of how enjoyable a film is. Critics are evaluating cinematic craft. A mass-audience entertainment film was not made to satisfy those criteria, and judging it by them produces a meaningless number. Audience 91% answers the actual question: did people who watched this enjoy it? For this type of film, that's the relevant metric. Both numbers are valid for different questions. Citing one to dismiss the other is intellectually dishonest.

    ๐Ÿ’ฌ 3 Replies
  • Netflix vs Disney+ vs Amazon Prime: Which Is Actually Worth It? (II)

    With streaming costs climbing and content quality uneven across all platforms, the 'which one should I keep' question has become genuinely complicated. Netflix wins on sheer variety โ€” original content across every genre, plus strong anime and Korean drama libraries. Disney+ is indispensable if you care about Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, and National Geographic content. Amazon Prime has the benefit of bundling with shopping discounts. My actual recommendation: rotate subscriptions monthly rather than holding all three simultaneously. The content you miss will still be there in three months.

    ๐Ÿ’ฌ 8 Replies
  • Most Anticipated Films of 2026: First Half Highlights (II)

    The first half of 2026 has a surprisingly strong film slate. A couple of franchise entries are generating real excitement among their respective fanbases, plus what looks like a genuinely ambitious fantasy epic adapted from a beloved novel. The one I'm watching most closely is a Japanese animated theatrical release that's been generating extraordinary early buzz โ€” I'm hoping Taiwanese distributors pick it up quickly. On the horror side, there are two releases that look like they're actually trying to do something interesting with the genre rather than just hitting genre beats.

    ๐Ÿ’ฌ 3 Replies
  • Netflix vs Disney+ vs Amazon Prime: Which Is Actually Worth It? (II)

    With streaming costs climbing and content quality uneven across all platforms, the 'which one should I keep' question has become genuinely complicated. Netflix wins on sheer variety โ€” original content across every genre, plus strong anime and Korean drama libraries. Disney+ is indispensable if you care about Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, and National Geographic content. Amazon Prime has the benefit of bundling with shopping discounts. My actual recommendation: rotate subscriptions monthly rather than holding all three simultaneously. The content you miss will still be there in three months.

    ๐Ÿ’ฌ 3 Replies
  • Reading the Subtext: What Great Animation Is Really Saying

    The best animation works on multiple levels simultaneously โ€” the surface story accessible to children, the deeper thematic layer visible to adults. This year's standout animated works have been particularly sophisticated in how they use surrealist visual language to express psychological states that realistic cinema struggles to render. A character's emotional collapse rendered as a physical distortion of space; a memory sequence where color temperature shifts to signal reliability. These are things only animation can do. If you've been watching animation purely for entertainment, try approaching one with critical attention โ€” you'll find it's a completely different experience.

    ๐Ÿ’ฌ 7 Replies
  • Netflix vs Disney+ vs Amazon Prime: Which Is Actually Worth It?

    With streaming costs climbing and content quality uneven across all platforms, the 'which one should I keep' question has become genuinely complicated. Netflix wins on sheer variety โ€” original content across every genre, plus strong anime and Korean drama libraries. Disney+ is indispensable if you care about Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, and National Geographic content. Amazon Prime has the benefit of bundling with shopping discounts. My actual recommendation: rotate subscriptions monthly rather than holding all three simultaneously. The content you miss will still be there in three months.

    ๐Ÿ’ฌ 4 Replies
  • Most Anticipated Films of 2026: First Half Highlights

    The first half of 2026 has a surprisingly strong film slate. A couple of franchise entries are generating real excitement among their respective fanbases, plus what looks like a genuinely ambitious fantasy epic adapted from a beloved novel. The one I'm watching most closely is a Japanese animated theatrical release that's been generating extraordinary early buzz โ€” I'm hoping Taiwanese distributors pick it up quickly. On the horror side, there are two releases that look like they're actually trying to do something interesting with the genre rather than just hitting genre beats.

    ๐Ÿ’ฌ 4 Replies