

They have to look good to advertisers. And the megacorps of the world need to be sure their brands are not associated with anything “controversial” so they can appeal to as many Americans as possible.
They have to look good to advertisers. And the megacorps of the world need to be sure their brands are not associated with anything “controversial” so they can appeal to as many Americans as possible.
You heard me, brother.
We’re a thirsty bunch
Google wants to sell your data. They don’t want to let Mozilla sell your data 🙃
Reddit doesn’t deserve our content. I’m sorry that it is inconvenient, truly I am.
Install the Dearrow extension in your web browser. It fixes all of that.
Stamets? “Now that’s a name I’ve not heard in a long time.”
Not sure if real, but if so, course they’ll use the red scare “in god we trust” instead of “E pluribus unum”.
Is the red angel suit a mech suit? I guess not.
People without sense want to get rid of central park, and turn all the subway lines into underground roadways.
Dumb engagement quizzes they everyone completes and then shares and feeds the data brokers are indeed mildly infuriating. Also more [email protected]
Star Trek always had some levity. And all the other new Trek has always felt too serious - they’ve been constantly saving the Federation/humanity/Galaxy/universe. If they need to make a funny show in order to tell a funny story, then fine. Go for it.
You might like The Orville, too.
I loved Lower Decks, and I hope somehow those stories continue. Did people who are new to Star Trek enjoy it, too?
As an aside, I think that was something that made Prodigy fantastic: it was a serialized program with episodic stories that didn’t require any understanding of Star Trek beforehand. The main characters weren’t part of the Federation, so the audience got to learn alongside them.
Without Lower Decks, it feels like there will be much less to talk about, anyway.
I don’t think Lemmy folks care about Reddit. Maybe also vice versa. You can’t have a war if there isn’t any conflict.
Property of Twitter? Does Section 230 still apply then?
Can’t let people know they were actually almost as powerful as the current overpriced silicon.