Sure. There's no reason not to, considering the brain, which is a physical object. Everything we think and do is a product of the physical world.
Delusions and hallucinations are a thing. Ever feel your phone vibrating in your pocket when it actually wasn't ? That's a hallucination, nothing supernatural about it. Feelings aren't a reliable way to assess reality, and relying on feelings to make decisions is a recipe for disaster.
Im not sure if it's just another modern tulip craze. Looks like it in many ways.
A vasectomy is a hell of a deal.
I agree, it's very absurd, and that's part of the point. It's also obvious too that someone gives a shit since they're willing to shell out millions of dollars for it. And as far as taping another piece of fruit to the wall, it unlikely to do well because with modern and conceptual art, it's all about who came up with the idea first.
It's really just one of a limited number of licenses which allows the owner of the license to showcase the work and legally regard it as an official work from the artist who first came up with the idea. Anyone can tape a banana to a wall, but only a few can do so and say that it's an 'original'.
It's like a mini veal calf.
Hard to be influenced by ads if one avoids them in the first place. I do a fairly good job at limiting my exposure to advertisements. Some are unavoidable, like outdoor advertisement, or going to a website with ads, but simply tuning out broadcast TV and radio, free streaming services and cable, with a few exceptions of course, eliminates a lot of wasted time on ads. I do pay money though to keep them away on some services. When someone brings up a funny ad that they saw on TV, I often have no clue what they're talking about, and that's great. My adversion to advertisement has been around since at least the early 2000s. I believe it was triggered when I sat down and watched the Weird Al movie "UHF" on Comedy Central and it took 4 hours to the end because of all the ads.
I wonder how long it'll last before it gets all spammy.
RIP. I love that movie too. Virginia Madsen did a wonderful job and the soundtrack by Philip Glass is sublime. It's nostalgic for me as well, since it takes place in Chicago during my formative years, and it's a little glimpse of what it was like at that time.
Even products "made in the USA", like an automobile, rely on parts from overseas suppliers, especially China.
Facebook deleted in 2017 and Twitter months before it was bought by you know who. I don't miss either of them. I love how Lemmy isn't all spammy.
Alister McGee's Alice. Pretty much a horror version of Alice in Wonderland, and it's a platformer with trippy graphics. I thought it was pretty fun.
Horses, recreational vehicles, motorhomes, boats, sports cars... I'll just settle with my watercolors. I will however splurge on Daniel Smith paints.
I play around with the paid version of chatgpt and I still don't have any practical use for it. it's just a toy at this point.
Nothing new. My both deceased grandmother's left behind houses, pole barns full of things. In the 80s, and the family resorted to renting a dumpster to get rid of much of it. It's kind of sad, but everyone already had lots of junk of their own. I'm guilty of this as well, I'm starting to fill up a storage unit of my own. I however think twice now when I make a purchase.
Meanwhile
For like 3-4 cups of prepared Starbucks coffee, I can get 2.5 lbs of whole bean coffee from Costco and get somewhere around 70 cups from it.
I wonder what it would be like if it was dipped in batter and deep fried? New state fair/carnival dish perhaps? I tried a deep fried Snickers bar years ago at one and it was worse than I thought it would be.