@puppycelebrity I really wanted to like this game and just found it... lame. I'm fine with unlikable characters as long as they feel like people. These all felt like cardboard cut-outs of 90s trope characters, and to have so little interactivity I feel like you have to really nail the narrative
@lear789 yes, that's literally the whole argument. He's not saying suicide bombing is ok, but that it needs to be understood as a form of political violence enacted with a goal in mind, akin to assassination, not a sign that the culture that the bombers come from is mindlessly barbaric.
*reading a book called Good Muslim, Bad Muslim, wherein the author explains how the behavior of Muslims is perceived differently based on whether their actions are seen as critical of the West or not*
"Wow, this guy sure seems critical of the West, he must be bad"
Before going live on CNN, I spoke with young New Yorkers — some who were all-in for Mamdani, others who were more skeptical.
His election night speech landed powerfully for his existing supporters. Unfortunately, it pushed some skeptics further away.
I don’t think it had to be that way. I said on CNN that I thought he had missed an opportunity.
Mamdani’s supporters didn’t appreciate that take very much. I listened and took their reactions very seriously. I talked and texted with several of them.
And I was left wondering: WAS there any way for Mamdani to give a powerful victory speech— staying true to his core values and beliefs, while STILL pulling more people into his movement?
After some research and reflection, it turns out that the answer is YES.
Because Mamdani already DID exactly that — just a few months ago. This summer, when he won the primary against Cuomo, this same leader gave a much warmer, more inclusive and more inviting victory speech.
I would have praised THAT kind of speech to the high heavens - and was prepared to do so.
It’s fascinating how different these speeches are. Here is how they stack up, head to head: https://t.co/f7Pvl6Ioyp
@__Guntar__@ZFlawles1s@ItsAstronomics It was the highest voter turnout in 50 years for nyc this is such a weird way to frame the race. He got a million votes dude
thinking about how I chose to musically direct my fallon performance just so I could discreetly slip in rhythm heaven sound bites to match our dance moves🥹it’s the game that got me through my teens 🥹🥹
IB: @therealstoinkle on tiktok
When someone who has the means to throw a cool quarter million to Cuomo, just to see if it works, makes a post this long about how awful Zohran will be for NYC, and how it will cause capital flight, doesn't it make you wonder... why he would even bother if it were all true?
I awoke this morning gravely concerned about New York City. I thought “What has NYC become that an avowed socialist who has supported defunding the police, whose solution to lowering food prices is city-owned supermarkets, who doesn’t understand that freezing rents will only reduce the supply of housing, who has no experience managing an organization -- let alone a city with a $100+ billion budget and a $2 trillion economy -- and who believes chants for ‘Globalizing the Intifada’ are acceptable, wins the Democratic Primary.
After speaking to those who supported @ZohranKMamdani, I believe that he won the primary largely not due to his policies, but rather because he is a superb politician who ran a remarkable and inspiring campaign. He is intelligent and articulate. He is young and charming, and he successfully played down incriminating @X posts and statements from his past, pitching a joyful campaign of unity.
And he won because the competition was very weak. His best competitor sat back and did not run a real campaign, relying on name recognition, early favorable polling and keeping a low profile to make it through. Not a strategy that I have ever seen work, but so be it.
The Democratic primary voter is clearly tired of the Democratic politics of the past and its aging and over-the-hill leadership – Who isn’t? [As a case in point, how embarrassing is it to watch aging Dems fall in line with their tweets of support for Mamdani, as they desperately try to defend their seats from the far left?] And therefore, without any real competition, Zohran and his attractive personal qualities and campaign skills magically make him the candidate of the future.
The problem, however, is that his policies would be disastrous for NYC. Socialism has no place in the economic capital of our country. The ability for NYC to offer services for the poor and needy, let alone the average New Yorker, is entirely dependent on NYC being a business-friendly environment and a place where wealthy residents are willing to spend 183 days and assume the associated tax burden. Unfortunately, both have already started making arrangements for the exits.
Mamdani is right that much about NYC is broken. The City has gotten much less safe while the cost of living here has become increasingly unattainable for many. We pay more for less. Unfortunately, his headline campaign promises of frozen rents and cheaper food from city-owned markets, among others, are certain to fail.
A mayor who disrespects the NYPD and has called for their defunding will get less effective policing, and Bratton’s ‘broken window theory’ will operate in reverse. A mayor who condones hate speech will incentivize more hate speech and violence. Words matter, and yes, they can inspire people to kill as we have recently tragically seen in our country and around the world.
New York City under Mamdani is about to become much more dangerous and economically unviable. Unlike our Federal government, NYC cannot print money, and this Federal Government won’t bail NYC out if things go bad. In fact, Mamdani would be a windfall for the Republican Party as NY becomes another failed major city run by Democrats alongside Seattle, Chicago, LA, and SF et al as Senator Fetterman so eloquently stated today, "I'd describe it as Christmas in July for the GOP."
So why did I become optimistic later this morning? The answer is that NYC has woken up in the last 24 hours. The substantial majority of NYC residents understand that socialism is a failed system, that rent freezes will destroy our housing base and shrink the affordable housing supply while killing new construction, and that an anti-capitalist Mayor will destroy jobs and cause businesses and wealthy taxpayers that have enabled NYC to balance the budget to move elsewhere. If 100 or so of the highest taxpayers in my industry chose to spend 183 days elsewhere, it could reduce NY state and city tax revenues by ~$5-10 billion or more, and that’s just my industry. Think Ken Griffin leaving Chicago for Miami on steroids.
The good news is that there are other charismatic, intelligent, articulate, handsome, charming, young yet more experienced and, importantly, more centrist politicians who are New York residents eligible for office. There are also extremely talented members of the NY business community who could be superb mayors, Bloomberg being the reference standard from the past.
And the setup is extremely attractive for a run for mayor. There are only 132 days until the election, which means the commitment of time to run is de minimis. This will be the most closely watched mayoral election in NYC in decades, perhaps ever, which, particularly in the social media and podcast era creates the opportunity for a new candidate to garner immediate name recognition, enormous media interest, and the visibility needed to get elected.
Importantly, there are hundreds of million of dollars of capital available to back a competitor to Mamdani that can be put together overnight (believe me, I am in the text strings and the WhatsApp groups) so that a great alternative candidate won’t spend any time raising funds.
So, if the right candidate would raise his or her hand tomorrow, the funds will pour in. I am sure that Mike Bloomberg will share his how-to-win-the-mayoralty IP and deliver his entire election apparatus and system to the aspiring candidate so that the candidate can focus all of his or her energy on the campaign.
One unfortunate fact, as far as I understand, is that the candidate will have to be a write-in as I believe that none of the current candidates established a nominating committee if they were to withdraw, which means that no one can take their spot on the ballot. This is such an important election, however, that I believe the write-in requirement could actually turn into an important call to action that brings people in throngs to the polls. It therefore won’t be the game stopper it would normally be in a typical election.
As a result, the risk/reward of running for mayor over the next 132 days is extremely compelling as the cost in time and energy is small, and the upside is enormous. If the candidate does not win, there is no harm, no foul, because the perceived probability of beating the Democratic nominee in a NYC mayoral election is extremely small. Therefore, there is no reputational risk to losing this election, and the corresponding reputational benefits are extraordinary whether one wins or loses.
If the candidate wins, this is obviously a huge home run for the City and the candidate, but it is also an opportunity to save the Democratic Party from itself, grabbing the wheel just before the party goes even further off the cliff. The new mayor would be a national superhero for the City, for the Party, and for the country.
For the aspiring politician, there is no better way to get name recognition, build relationships with long-term donors, and to showcase oneself than to run for mayor over the next 132 days. This election is already global front page news. For the aspiring young candidate, the amount of publicity and the massive followers to be gained are of incalculable long-term value whether they win or lose, and whatever they choose to do in the future, business, politics or otherwise.
And there is a defensive reason for a politician to run. For the more centrist Democrat politician, a Mamdani win is very bad for your next election. As the Party veers further to the left, the Party’s backing for your future candidacy deteriorates substantially as Mamdani and AOC take control of the Party.
In my experience, opportunities with minimal downside that don’t require huge investments of time while offering massive upside get filled. If you were ever thinking about running for office, or running for a higher office than you currently hold, this is likely the best opportunity that you are going to have.
All of the above is not just theory, as I have a superb candidate who I believe can win who meets all of the criteria, but if I were to say his name or even reach out to him, it would have a negative effect on his candidacy, as I am a supporter of President Trump, and that alone taints anyone I would recommend for many and perhaps most NYC Democratic Party members. So rather than my making suggestions, I welcome yours.
Who is your best centrist candidate who could go toe-to-toe with Mamdani on the campaign trail and on the debate stage? Let’s crowdsource the names and then do a poll.
If someone is ready to raise their hand, I will take care of the fundraising.
This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the right candidate. More importantly, it is an opportunity to save our City and be a superhero. Life is short and you must dare to be great.
The time is now.
lmao, the @nytimes posted the new poll, but not without putting a phony poll right above it, that doesn't even meet their own pollster criteria, and that was put up by the Cuomo superPAC FixTheCity, paid for by Michael Bloomberg and Doordash.
they. Are. SCARED.
🚨NEW POLL🚨
Final @EmersonPolling/@PIX11News/@thehill Mayoral Poll shows @ZohranKMamdani Ahead of @andrewcuomo in Ranked Choice Voting
Final Round:
Mamdani: 52%
Cuomo: 48%
Cuomo leads from round 1 to 7, until the final round when there is a flip.
Death Stranding 2 Composer Woodkid says Hideo Kojima made changes to the game because early testers liked the game too much and it wasn’t polarizing enough!
“And he said, ‘If everyone likes it, it means it’s mainstream. It means it’s conventional. It means it’s already pre-digested for people to like it. And I don’t want that.
I want people to end up liking things they didn’t like when they first encountered it, because that’s where you really end up loving something’. And that was really a lesson for me; not doing stuff to please people, but to make them shift a little bit and move them.”
https://t.co/e4RnzCFacw
ITLLT turns 10 years old. i was on tour as Giant Claw and stayed an extra few days in philadelphia with James to record. we wanted to refine what we had started on our previous collab Evangelis.
never ever thought it would be heard by more than like 100 people
Ideally you would just have AI handle all your intimate relationships, hobbies, learning, personal growth etc. and spend all that extra time watching short form video content.
@FkMySmPnsLife I have only seen the trailer, but the impression I got was that the movie would be about a school shooting, and the kids coming back to kill the community that did nothing to stop it
@Hbomberguy@KwayPayne90 I voted anyway, but I do wonder. democracy is not a once every four years affair, and additionally, i think that if the democrats lost an election and the big takeaway everyone talks about is that they failed to attract voters to their left… maybe their strategy will change
The UN, who was established in the wake of the Holocaust's horrors, has chosen to hang paintings on its walls that explicitly call for the destruction of the Jewish people and do not recognize the State of Israel. This is a disgrace, and I demand that the UN immediately remove this shameful exhibition. Watch >>
Not enough people are pointing out that for this to work, they definitely have a real person, or several, remote controlling this thing to “assist” the ai. And this is all tech is anymore, Junk meant to distance you from the labor that supports your life