asklemmy

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londos, (edited ) in What is your favorite time travel movie or show?

Goodnight Sweetheart is just the best.

Somewhere in Time, which someone already mentioned. I wish I liked it more, but it gets credit because the Jack Finney book Time and Again, which it is very loosely inspired by, is one of the best time travel stories ever.

And Continuum. Not because it’s the greatest, but no one had mentioned it yet, and this thread could be a great reference for anyone in the future. No pun intended.

kindenough, in What is your favorite time travel movie or show?
@kindenough@kbin.social avatar

Idiocracy

Crashumbc,

Not time travel but a good movie.

Valmond,

Well he travelled forward in time :-)

MuhammadJesusGaySex, in What country are you using lemmy from?

Alabama, USA

gregorum, (edited ) in What is your favorite time travel movie or show?

Doctor Who, c’mon, people!

TurnItOff_OnAgain,

Waaaay to far down the list.

It’s new who day tomorrow too! We get to see the toymaker and the next regeneration!

gregorum, (edited )

About to watch it now!

Edit: it was amazing!

PP_BOY_, in What brand/model of pants can you recommend?
@PP_BOY_@lemmy.world avatar

If you don’t mind the weird styling, Wrangler’s 13MWZ jeans are bullet proof

ChefTyler1980, in Action cam recommendations? (Europe)

Insta360 100%

reddig33, in What is your favorite time travel movie or show?

Time After Time. Somewhere In Time.

Kolanaki, (edited ) in What is your favorite time travel movie or show?
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

That isn’t Back to the Future?

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)

roofuskit,
@roofuskit@lemmy.world avatar

Solid choice. I’ve shown this one to non-trekkies who haven’t seen TNG and they really enjoyed it even as a stand alone movie.

grue,

Hot take: Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home > Star Trek: First Contact

anyRandomUser, in What country are you using lemmy from?

Lower Silesia, Poland

PP_BOY_, in how similar are other North American countries to USA??
@PP_BOY_@lemmy.world avatar

The United States isn’t even similar to the United States

JadenSmith,

I’ve stepped foot in about 39 States and can agree. There’s an incredible amount of diversity in the United States.

Drusas,

I've lived in every corner of the country, but not the flyovers, and all I can say is that you are completely correct.

kalkulat,
@kalkulat@lemmy.world avatar

This guy is visiting many places all over the US, month after month, spending his time (often for days) talking to the natives and really digs into that diversity.

www.youtube.com/

Radicalized, (edited )

Yes, so much diversity in your culture of strip malls and and suburbs.

inb4 someone names one of five cities with unique architecture in America.

Also, I’m Canadian so this is self-deprecating. We gutted our cities 80 years ago and turned them into boring asphalt wastelands. I can see that at an intersection not too far from my apartment, where one tall, beautiful building from 100 years ago still remains, but on every other corner is a gas station, a car dealership, and a parking lot. And the streets that were once walkable and pleasant are now stroads with ridiculous traffic patterns that were widened to make way for more car traffic. I know this because an old photograph of the same area is painted on the side of an electrical box near that intersection.

Lowpast,

What a horrible take - you clearly haven’t traveled much, abroad or even in your own country. Diversity and culture is more than architecture. Do you believe that Toronto is similar to Ontario? There’s definitely a percieved lack of “culture” in America but to believe it’s ubiquitous is just hilarious

ProfessorGumby,
@ProfessorGumby@midwest.social avatar

Um … Isn’t Toronto in Ontario?

RupeThereItIs,

Whatever, he’s on a roll.

Chobbes,

We’re just not well travelled enough to know :(.

A_Toasty_Strudel,
@A_Toasty_Strudel@lemmy.world avatar

My dude, I hate to say it, but your inexperience with the US is showing. People from Kentucky are a COMPLETELY different animal than people from Cali. Hell, Cali is so big the northern part of the state is just SO crazy different from from southern areas. Some guy from Chicago is going to be so utterly different from someone from UP Michigan it’s hard to believe they’re from the same country.

Radicalized,

I’m so tired of hearing Americans yap on like this. So, so tired. Does anyone else notice this? How they defend their different cultures found in each state by pretending they’re as dissimilar as European countries are from each other?

Especially when I’m talking about architecture and cities. Bleh.

mybobafetish,

I’m so tired of hearing pretentious douchebags yap on like this. So, so tired. Does anyone else notice this?

NewNewAccount,

You can almost literally drive from Paris to Moscow and back in the same distance as it takes to get from Los Angeles to New York. You think it’s impossible for a country as large as the United States to have unique subcultures?

Knuk,

European cultures had time to develop before travel was easy, so in practice they were much further apart in terms of culture spread. The territorial size argument here doesn’t work.

NewNewAccount,

Of course you’re right, because the US was entirely vacant before a single unified culture simultaneously migrated to all corners of its borders. Weirdly enough, that happened after the advent of trains, cars, planes, the internet, etc. so there was no opportunity for pockets of subculture to develop.

Totally negates my point! I should have thought of that. Embarrassing.

Drusas,

Yes is the simple answer to your question. The cultural differences can be dramatic.

Mesophar,

What, pray tell, is your definition of culture? Are local cuisine and regional delicacies a part of it? How about accents, speech patterns, and slang/dialects? You mention architecture and cities, so do layouts of cities, differences in urban planning ideologies, planned vs organic growth, or style of buildings get accepted as culture?

If you’re going to dismiss any social differences between cities, then what is the difference or culture between any two modern cities in Amwrica, Europe, Asia, or anywhere else, other than the language they speak?

“If you ignore the culture, this city has no culture!”

key,
@key@lemmy.keychat.org avatar

Everyone knows the only definition of culture is what year your city was founded and therefore how many old buildings it has. Oh and If you need to leave city center to see the ruins of the structures Europeans destroyed during colonization it doesn’t count. Only old buildings you can see from a tour bus counts as culture, duh.

JadenSmith,

It’s funny that person assumed I’m American, as well. Born and raised in London, UK, yet lived in America for a number of years.

My outlook is entirely from an outsider perspective, and the differences in culture is very, very evident like the examples you mentioned.

FireTower,
@FireTower@lemmy.world avatar

Yes, so much diversity in your culture of strip malls and and suburbs.

inb4 someone names one of five cities with unique architecture in America.

There’s a lot more to culture than architecture.

Drusas,

And architecture actually does vary from region to region quite a bit.

Blamemeta,

Canada is basicly Portland Oregan, execept Alberta which is Texas lite, and Quebec which is New Orleans but worse somehow.

01adrianrdgz,
@01adrianrdgz@lemmy.world avatar

Coahuila is Albuquerque lite??

MeatsOfRage, (edited )

Depends on where you are. Canada is like Portland in Vancouver. Really Canada is pretty similar to whatever region is across the border. The West coast is very Oregon, California like. The prairies are very mid west Montana. Winnipeg and Ontario are Minnesota and Michigan except the Toronto area which is a cross of New York City and Chicago. The Maritimes are Maine and New Hampshire. Quebec is a little harder to pin down.

200ok,

hard to pin down

If that’s a separatism joke, y’got me

PP_BOY_,
@PP_BOY_@lemmy.world avatar

The Wheelchair Assassins

200ok,

I had to google that.

Damn:

Assassins Fateuils Rolents (“Wheelchair Assassins” in English). The most violent and feared anti-O.N.A.N. terrorist organization, comprised of Quebecois miners’ sons who lost their legs through playing a game called La Culte du Prochain Train (“The Cult of the Next Train”).

200ok,

For the record, I don’t know what half of that quoted text even means and I’m afraid to go down that rabbit hole. I hope my imagination is worse than reality.

Drusas,

Are you telling me everywhere in Canada aside from Alberta and Quebec have amazing food? Because that's what I associate with Portland. Also what might be the world's greatest bookstore.

cerement, in how similar are other North American countries to USA??
@cerement@slrpnk.net avatar

more similarity between Western Canada and Western US than between Western US and Eastern US …

cheese_greater, (edited )

Isn’t most of of Western Canada like the US South (Alberta = Texas), BC is like Washington/Oregon, maybe California?

cerement,
@cerement@slrpnk.net avatar

(Alberta and Texas are central plains / central prairies / “midwest” – calling Texas western is a bit of a misnomer, the US decided that anything west of the Mississippi is the “Great West”)

cheese_greater,

Alberta seems a lot more like Texas culturally and economically and also politically

silkroadtraveler,

Coastal BC west of the cascades is very similar to Puget Sound region and Portland. Anywhere east of Whistler and Chilliwack is much more rural religious and conservative, similar to central and eastern Washington. Another cultural oddity about inland BC - Kelowna and Kamloops have some of the most violent and active Hells Angels chapters.

rubythulhu,

So here’s the thing. The whole west coast of NA, including california, oregon, washington, and BC are considered to be super liberal areas. This is true by a majority of the population, but all of these regions are still filled with people who are as conservative as any other rural area in the US. It’s just that in those regions, more people populate the large cities than the rural areas.

Really, conservatism reigns in poorer, less educated, and more isolated regions with low population and without diversity, where tribalism can run rampant; it’s easy to be a racist shitbag if you barely meet anyone with a different skin color than you. Liberalism thrives in regions with diverse populations where in order to live we have to cooperate with others.

I live in Portland, Oregon. People tend to think oregon is a blue state wonderland (except during covid and the floyd protests. then apparently the whole city was on fire and in a state of complete anarchy; spoiler— it totally wasn’t). That’s not the case. We just have enough people in large cities to outnumber the racist cuntballoons in the rural areas. And that’s what the whole west coast is like (and basically every “blue state” in the US)

Western Canada is a lot like western USA. Filled with shart-gargling racists/homophobes/transphobes, but outnumbered by people who aren’t pieces of shit.

west coast (and especially PNW) culture is just “we kinda outnumber them slightly”, but the overall issue comes down to: in rural/conservative areas, it’s easy to be racist/homophobic/transphobic/other-religions-phobic, because you never have to consider anyone’s feelings that hurt your worldview because you don’t know them personally and do not consider them to be human on the same level as you.

cheese_greater, (edited )

deleted_by_moderator

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  • Rhaedas, in What is your favorite time travel movie or show?
    @Rhaedas@kbin.social avatar

    The Time Traveler's Wife is an interesting twist on things, including free will. I haven't seen the series version.

    scytale, in What is your favorite time travel movie or show?

    Edge of Tomorrow.

    Send_me_nude_girls,

    Live. Die. Repeat.

    darelik, (edited )

    Edge of Tomorrow 2 when

    ProjectPatatoe,

    Iirc, edge of tomorrow 2 cant happen according to source material.

    echodot,

    They are doing one though. Which also confuses me as well

    foggy, in how similar are other North American countries to USA??

    The countries are all huge. They are more alike one another at their borders than they are similar to themselves throughout.

    01adrianrdgz,
    @01adrianrdgz@lemmy.world avatar

    so for example, Ontario is similar to Oklahoma and Coahuila is similar to Texas, that would be a new point of view!!

    Shadow,
    @Shadow@lemmy.ca avatar

    You know Oklahoma doesn’t border Canada right?

    nickhammes,

    Not yet!

    01adrianrdgz,
    @01adrianrdgz@lemmy.world avatar

    I know but Oklahoma gives me that vibe, it sounds like a Canadian place, I love Oklahoma of course.

    foggy, (edited )

    No I mean people in Vancouver and people in Nova Scotia are more culturally distinct than Nova Scotians and folks from Maine.

    Same applies to Mexicali and Calexico. Very similar. But Mexicali isn’t a whole lot like Savanah Georgia.

    Space separates culture more effectively than invisible lines.

    onion,

    The same applies to Germany and Austria, which aren’t that huge

    SendMePhotos,

    It isn’t always about the size.

    shinigamiookamiryuu, in how similar are other North American countries to USA??

    Are we allowed to answer for the other thirty North American countries?

    01adrianrdgz,
    @01adrianrdgz@lemmy.world avatar

    yes of course!! I was talking about the two countries that surround United States!!

    Tremble,

    So not including any island nations ? Pretty sure they all have universal health care

    Furball,

    Some people don’t include Central America or the Caribbean countries when talking about North America, even though you technically are supposed to.

    shinigamiookamiryuu,

    What about Greenland? They too are, one might say, a North American country.

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