Given #TwitterDown & #RateLimitExceeded nonsense: if you are looking for a better social home - We built out this tool to make joining #Mastodon seemless and simple! Share to any friends looking to jump that still have 600 reads left today!
https://t.co/wTkbcfS5cT
@historyinmemes My grandfather was a lumberjack in the northwest, in the early 1920โs I think. A massive log rolled over his leg and crushed it, and might have killed him if he hadnโt seen it moving out the corner of his eye. His leg was curved from that accident for the rest of his life.
@dantheshive I should add, it also falls into a currently popular anime genre I call "fantasy characters falling in loves with modern Japanese cuisine".
@dantheshive I've read the manga, the light novel, watched the anime, read the spinoff manga, the other spinoff manga, watched the spinoff anime, but I have not read the other other spinoff manga... anyway it's not bad. ^_^
@CervineComedy There's a really massive fantasy train (several stories tall) that appears in one of the later sections of She Professed Herself Pupil of the Wise Man. It was in volume 5 of the light novels I think, too far in to appear in the anime.
I've mostly given up on posting to Twitter, but for what it's worth I've joined Camp NaNo about a week late. Most of what I've done so far is just working through character beats and story beats based on some panels I attended at NorWesCon -- plotting in other words.
@_KeepRockAlive_ As an example, an all-Native American band would probably have meaning to the band members and to Native American fans. That doesn't mean a lot of other people can't enjoy the music without even knowing where the band members are from. ^_^
@_KeepRockAlive_ Or an all-(whatever) band, if that's part of the band's identity, then it benefits them at least. Whether it means anything to the audience is entirely up to them (the audience).