The “deleted” scene from Eddie’s breakdown that was included in Fox’s “We are family” season 5 recap video, which aired in September 2022, but wasn’t included in 5x13 “Fear-O-Phobia”, has been added and edited into the above video. Since the deleted portion starts when Eddie first looks up at Buck, it was added and edited into the section that begins after Buck said, “Eddie, hey, hey...what’s going on? Hey!” and before Eddie says, “They’re all dead!” because it seems like that’s where it might have been if the show hadn’t DELETED the majority of Eddie’s scene.
It’s interesting that all of Eddie’s breakdown scene wasn’t aired even though there was plenty of time for two boring emergencies to be included, i.e., the sharks and the spiders which took up more than 14 minutes of the episode (each emergency was more than 7 minutes long). Also there were three unnecessary Buck and TayKay scenes that took up more than 9 minutes of the episode (each of their scenes were more than 3 minutes long). If both emergencies and the BT scenes would have been shortened, instead of them taking up almost 25 minutes (which is more than half) of the 43-minute episode, there would have been plenty of time for all of Eddie’s breakdown to be included instead of the 5-minute scene that was shoved in at the end of the episode.
EDDIE DESERVES BETTER than the cropped and shortened scenes he’s always given. Hopefully this will be remedied in 6B but with the way he was sidelined for a lot of 6A, it’s unlikely.
Video: 5x13 “Fear-O-Phobia” and Fox’s “We are family” season 5 recap
for like 3 weeks i was wondering why i was sleeping so much and felt listless. and just now I managed to email 3 people and responded to a month old message in the span of an hour because I got back to TAKING MY FUCKIN MEDS..........
Maybe its because for most of the story senshi thinks chilchuck is a child maybe its because chilchuck's divorce is not as cut and dry as them no longer loving each other or even disliking each other
thinking about character interactions across medias because im Normal, and i think p03 would see v1 as a freak of robot kind. I mean, it's a robot (inorganic) that refuels on blood (organic). p03 would probably find that pretty disgusting
LIKE something I think is all of the Askr family are like mirrors. Alfonse is a reflection of how much he loves Sharena and the summoner. Sharena is a reflection of how much she loves Alfonse and how, I think in the autistic sense, I think she mirrors A LOT. Henriette is a reflection of how much she loves Gustav (and seemingly, so severely that that love struggles to reach everyone else). Gustav was likely a reflection of how much he loved Henriette and his father. All of them are performing, adhering to SOMETHING. Their roles, and what seems to be The Correct Course of Action.
wait, as a student, do you live in a dorm with someone? I am planning on studying but Idk how I am going to handle living with someone else that I don't know, at least in the beginning (ㅠ﹏ㅠ)
I don't know how it works in your country, but I don't think dorms are a thing in Norway? There is student housing though, both privately and through the university, but they are all off campus and more like flats.
I went to "high school" in the next town over, so I shared a flat with other people for two years already then; one good experience and one not so good. Throughout the years I've shared a room with another person at a folkehøyskole, then lived with my ex, then alone in an apartment, and the last year I shared a flat with some friends of mine. Most of them were very positive experiences.
The experiences definitely vary depending on who you live with, and the down-side with living with strangers is that you can be unlucky if they are very annoying/unhelpful etc. However, most people are very nice, and everyone wants to have a peaceful relationship with their flatmates. Communication is definitely a very important part of it. It does help to have your own room you can retreat to when the social battery is dead though. Most of my friends love their flatmates and living with other people. Here are some positives for you;
you will always have someone to come home to
you can save money on groceries
you don't have to go food shopping alone
you can have movie nights regularly
you have someone to play board games with
you have someone who can buy you stuff for you when you get sick
you have someone to walk to uni with
you can went to them about your classes (complaining is what brings us all together)
you have someone who can give you a toilet-roll while you are stuck on the toilet
you don't have to do all the cleaning alone
you can share common expenses (like dish soap etc.)
it's a nice way to get to know other people; your flatmates might introduce you to new friends etc.
Overall, living with strangers for some years, is a valuable experience. You will learn a lot from it and can make some really good friends in the process 💖 My advice is to be understandable to other people's situations and personalities, but at the same time set clear boundaries for yourself and communicate any issues you have ✨ and if it's the worst, at least you get some good stories to tell later
idk how irl celebrities handle fame at a young age like at seventeen i had a couple hundred people regularly interacting with me and putting me on a pedestal and that almost made me crazy. i see new writers getting attention in fandom and i immediately have to put myself in front of them and start barking. get behind me girl
i'm taking the jlpt this sunday and had a stress dream last night abt it bc it sort of snuck up on me and now it's kind of a question of how much my actual japanese abilities will carry me (versus if i should've been cramming on flashcards this past month) but the listening portion is far simpler conversation than my coworkers and i have so. i think that maybe instead of "damn i should've been studying japanese" my perspective should just be "i speak japanese"
Hello
Today, I made a hammock.
It's been a project of the last couple of days. I bought the materials on Sunday afternoon, and have been pouring over Nate Large's YouTube videos for how to make and rig an American Navy-style Hammock for quite some time. I initially found them through significant research I was doing for The Rescue and The Stranding and I learned a ton from Nate's videos.
You may remember some time ago, I got myself a reference-Henry:
This guy is the full 8 inches Henry claims to be (Henry is only 7.2") but he's handy to have around.
Since I got him he's been milling around on my desk for the most part, has come on a few purse adventures and so on, but I kept feeling bad that I didn't have a designated place for him to sleep.
Well, a bed wasn't going to cut it.
So, I reference again: Mr. Nate Large.
It started simply enough: I bought some fabric samples that resembled canvas enough, bought some D-rings because I figured they'd be easier to work with, needles, fancy thick thread, and came back to get to work.
The first thing I did was start on the clews, and that required building a clew jig, as seen in this video.
I am not a handiman by nature nor a particularly skilled or crafty creature in general, so I jimmy rigged something with a chunk of furniture board I had lying around from something:
On the first one the D-ring was too close the comb I was using as pegs, so it's adjusted in the second picture.
Honestly I'm pretty proud of this McGuyver-level setup.
I didn't know how many loops I was going to be able to make for the clew with the measurements I had (again, nothing is completely precise just because I was going by rough estimates, eye-balling, and a general hit of a 10.4% scale of everything) so I kept this one pretty tight, which was difficult BUT it got the job done. Toothpicks for runners and thumbtacks as far as the eye can see.
The first completed clew, I had somehow missed literally the first loop but being as it was still functional, I kept it. If I had to scrap and start over at this point, I'd put the damn thing down and never pick it up again.
Second clew I went ahead and spread the loops out (there's 10 instead of 12 by the way, which I forgot to mention above). I hit all the loops this time on the finished product and am very very proud of having done both tiny weaves.
Next step was the hammock. I took the white fabric I had, cut it twice as wide as I needed it because I wanted to try and replicate the thickness of the canvas I assumed would be used, and did the only stitch I know (needle go in, needle come out, needle go in again) to close up the open side and turn it inside out. I'm actually pretty proud of this especially because I only stabbed myself once! In the thigh, so it barely even counts.
I used a little hair flat-iron I never use to iron the fabric between stages. One thing I did NOT do was fold and sew the seams at the end, and that was literally because I realized that the measurements I had been using were for Canon-Henry, not Reference Henry. Canon-Henry is 10.4% scale, Reference-Henry is 11.6%, which is a pretty big difference when you're measuring the lengths of hammocks.
No I did not do grommets
I've never done grommets in my life and wasn't about to try and learn at nearly a 1/10th scale. I was crazy enough for doing THIS in the first place, I can ignore the need for awling and grommets and whatever else would've needed to happen for COMPLETE ACCURACY. Theater of the mind, friends.
Anyway, I used the largest yarn darner that came in the pack I bought to poke 10 holes at equal intervals (1.4cm apart) along the sides, and then used the need to string the loops through the holes, and using a girth-knot on the first loop over my itty bitty rope, I slipped the rope through the rest of the loops until girth-knotting the end, and then: VOILA
ONE FULLY RIGGED CLEW
This was the first clew, so you can see in the second picture that one of the loops a little janky, but again: that's aesthetic problems. It's still very functional.
Second verse, same as the first until we get us:
TWO FULLY RIGGED CLEWS
Our hammock was now ready for testing, but I was too lazy to go get my ring-light stand to take proper pictures with, so the first demos were done with the use of the clew rigging board:
Henry in the hammock while slack, Henry in the hammock while tight. Snug as a bug in a rug.
Then, obviously, had to find a place to actually hang it. So: Over the storage-cubby in my desk, which I desperately need to clean out.
So that's the story of how I spent an excessive amount of time learning a very cool, neat set of skills at a very small scale just so I could flex a little.
Thanks for coming along on this journey of learning, and thanks again to Nate Large, whose name he will never know is so god damn on-point right now.
The weather needs to stop being cold and cloudy and stupid and miserable so my brain gets back out of fart stink hibernation seasonal affective disorder bastard mode. I gotta draw Sol Badguy but my motivation is directly tied to how much the sun's been out like I'm some kinda sunflower solar panel