Kristen Stewart wants to direct another movie by the end of the year "and put it on f---ing YouTube."
"Whatever money we make from that will be what I spend on my next one and there will be a trickle-down effect. I just don’t want to talk to these bros anymore ... I love Hollywood, I love big movies, [but] I don’t think I’d be very good at making them. I want to make weird s---. And I’m fully OK doing that in a kind of insulated, bizarre way. But I don’t want to do the thing where I wait five years for someone to give me $1 million to make something. I’m going to make it f---ing tomorrow." https://t.co/WHK5J1jGVF
Yes, cloud seeding is real. No, it doesn’t summon 12 inches of rain and wipe out towns.
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They also teach this fundamental at Ground water school also..😉
Exactly, The science backs you up—cloud seeding is real, but its effects are modest and tightly constrained by physics.
🌧️ What Cloud Seeding Can Do:
It enhances rainfall from existing clouds by up to 20%, typically in dry regions.
It uses substances like silver iodide to encourage droplet formation.
It’s been used in Texas since the 1950s to combat drought—not to engineer storms.
🚫 What It Can’t Do:
It cannot create clouds or summon storms from nothing.
It cannot cause catastrophic flooding like the recent Texas disaster.
It cannot override large-scale weather systems like remnants of Tropical Storm Barry, which meteorologists confirmed were the true cause of the July 4 floods2.
Even Rainmaker, the company at the center of the controversy, suspended operations before the flood began, citing excessive moisture in the atmosphere. Experts from Texas A&M, Imperial College London, and the National Weather Service have all debunked the idea that cloud seeding could trigger anything remotely close to what happened.
i’m gonna tell the flowers what you did. and then they’ll tell the bees and the bees will tell the birds. good luck next time you come to the meadow bro