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How to develop good taste: 1. Copy others 2. Learn the rules 3. Study history and learn why the rules are the rules Good taste = a language. Good taste means speaking the right words so you can say what you're wanting to say. This clip is a great...

55,484 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten •via X (Twitter)

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The president speaking at his golf course to the leaders of Latin American nations at the “Shield of Americas.” This guy is clinically demented. Try to read it. “I'd love to get to your countries at some point. Marco loves going to your countries. He's always at one of these countries. He likes your countries the best, OK? You know, where are you? I mean, Chile, how good, how is Chile doing? Good. He likes it. He feels very calm. We all like him, right? It helps. He's got a language-- he's got a language advantage over me. Because I'm not learning your damn language. I don't have time. I was OK with languages. But I'm not going to spend time learning your language. That much I want to. Just give me a good interpreter. Interpreter? Very important. And I know if somebody's good. I may not speak the language. But I know I had an interpreter recently that wasn't good, talking to a very strong person from a different part of the world. And I could tell, even though I-- even though I don't speak the language, I could tell the interpreter was not good. When you go, uh, uh, uh, when I give a long flowing, beautiful sentence, and in this case, it was a woman. And she gave it in about one fourth at the time. I said, well, their language may be efficient. But it's not that efficient. And I could also tell one half great interpreters. Interpreter is very important. You have a bad interpreter. You think you're doing well? What did I do a good job talking to? This one of that was I great when I spoke to Putin today. Was I great when I spoke to President? And she was I great. But if the interpreter is speaking right or is weak or is ineffective or not good or not interpreting your words correctly, um, in one case we had an interpreter who once you disagreed with what we were saying, you actually changed it. We considered her a foreign minister, right? But what no, the interpreter is-- I talk about it all the time. Interpreters are really important. When you don't speak the language, they don't speak the language. It's you people have no idea. People have no idea how valuable. And I'm on them all the time. People have no idea how valuable a good interpreter is.”

Jim Stewartson, Decelerationist 🇨🇦🇺🇦🇺🇸

990,081 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten

LINGORM PRESENTER BITE ME #BiteMeHealthifulXLingOrm #KwongPastry Q. With your incidents, with your past incidents, how was it? Ling: My past incidents? Q. Both of the incidents, they overwhelmed you at the same time. Ling: It was another period where I learned a lesson. A time when I learned from my mistakes and it’s more like gradually correcting them point by point. Q. Were you stressed about the past incidents, facing 2 things at the same time? Ling: Was I stressed? Well, first of all, I collected myself about the mistakes I made. Since my intention was not to do it deliberately. What I really wanted was for fans to taste my childhood flavor that I can't find in Thailand. I wanted it to be delicious with a good taste, to the point where I probably overlooked something. I have to humbly accept this and it's a good lesson for a new seller like me, so I have to apologize for my mistake. Q. You've managed everything and settled all the matters now, right? Ling: Yes, it's currently in process. I’ve already met (stakeholders). It’s now in the process of being done correctly. Q. As a new seller, facing something like this, were you disheartened? Ling: Yes, I was disheartened, because I intended to want everyone to taste something delicious, so I really didn't want this to happen. Also, I didn't know the laws and I'm from overseas. So, I'm really sorry.. once everything is done correctly, fans might get to taste it again. but the process will take some time. Q. So that means right now, you're following the process, like getting FDA approval? Ling: Yes, I'm following the correct process. Q: Are they still on sale now? Ling: No, it’s not being sold. Q: So it's temporarily closed? Ling: I'm waiting for everything to be in order first.

lingdenn. (slowwww)

37,305 Aufrufe • vor 11 Monaten

David Lean explains how one can learn Filmmaking by watching movies and what constitutes a good movie: "Interviewer: Do you believe that the same principles are involved in making a good amateur film as a good professional film? David Lean: Absolutely the same. The only difference lies in the ambitiousness of the production, but a good film is good on any level, amateur or professional. Interviewer: Then you believe that the amateur can learn something about film technique from watching good professional movies? David Lean: Certainly, if he watches them in the proper way. Interviewer: How would you advice an amateur to watch a film in order to learn from it? For example, how would you advise the amateur to watch 'Bridge on the River Kwai' (1957)? David Lean: I would hope that he would be quite incapable of appreciating the technique of the film. I think that really good filmmaking conceals technique. If a film is really successful, the audience should be so caught up in it that they do not notice how it was made. Interviewer: Do you think then that to really study a movie you should see it more than once, the first time for impact and to enjoy it, and the second time to learn from it? David Lean: This sounds like a plug, but I think so. To really study a film you should have reached the point where you are no longer involved in the dramatic action. In a sense you must become bored with the story before you can study the technique. Of course as you become more and more accustomed to watching films in this manner you will automatically become more sensitive to technique on the first viewing. Interviewer: Did you use this technique in learning? David Lean: In my younger days, I used to spend hours in movie houses to watch the cutting. Interviewer: From a Technical stand point what do you think is the mark of a good film? David Lean: It tells its story in pictures. This is always the problem of good filmmaking. This is one of the biggest things that can be learned from any good movie. The amateur who wants to learn from viewing the films should try to constantly notice how the director is telling his story in terms of visuals. 'How can I show it?' is the questing the director must constantly ask himself. Of course, it is faster in shooting and much easier to tell a story in dialogue, but it is not as effective. Dialogue compared to visuals is a bore; you are using a moving picture camera." (David Lean's interview with Charles Reynolds, 1958)

DepressedBergman

90,962 Aufrufe • vor 7 Monaten