5/28/2022
Salutations.
It is now 9:26 AM EST for me.
Before I begin explaining ideas ‘How’, ‘Not effective’, and ‘Guilty not able’, I want to explain idea ‘Standard demographic is not standard’. I explained that idea in a previous list, but now I think I can explain it better, and in my opinion it’s important to explain it now, before I begin. I don’t believe I need a music and trailer to give idea ‘Standard demographic is not standard’ some attention span. After I explain it, I will introduce to you the music video and trailer I found earlier today.
Standard demographic is not standard:
Using the moment I originally explained idea ‘Standard demographic is not standard’, and from that moment ‘from now on'(I tried to say it), and continuing from that moment(I think that’s it), when I make these ideas, the main perspective, at least one of the main perspectives used, is that you are in a situation where instigation should not be used on one another. Sure, I believe that there are jobs where instigation exposure may be an unavoidable hazard exposure, but what is also true I believe is that, for the most part, you are not supposed to instigate others in school and at work. For example, I saw a few times an obvious declaration from a school that it is a ‘bully free’ zone. Instigating other students is discouraged. Another example from tv, there was an episode of ‘Frasier’ where Frasier and his brother were talking about a student when they were in grammar school who was expelled for his inappropriate behavior. It’s been a while since I saw that episode, but I believed that that student was expelled for instigating other students, and they were wondering what that person would have been like if he remained in school. It’s a tv show. So, when you read these ideas, don’t use them as if they are ‘standard’ ideas. The ‘standard’ should be generalistically a situation where instigation use should not exist in the 1st place. Like I said at the end of most of these ideas, ‘for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.’
Also, when people get jobs, the working expectations could easily be different as it compares to the general public’s expectation perspectives. For example, a person may be encouraged to continue to ‘upgrade’ their ideas in their company’s intranet, for reasons that may not be familiar to the general public. I am upgrading these ideas, and when you(kids) get a job, you too may be encouraged to upgrade your ideas in your job’s intranet.
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It is now 10:02 AM EST for me. The music video that I watched for the 1st time and recommend refurbished for this advice is called ‘Hold My Hand (From “Top Gun: Maverick”)’ by Lady Gaga. I found it by searching in www.youtube.com for phrase ‘new songs may 2022’, click ‘FILTERS’ at the upper left hand corner, for ‘UPLOAD DATE’ select ‘This week’, and one of the 1st selections offered is called ‘Top Songs of the Week | May 27, 2022’. From that video collection, the video clip from song ‘Hold My Hand’ starts 9 minutes and 46 seconds into that video collection, and is #3 out of 100. The publishe for that video collection is ‘Hot Music Charts’, and it premiered May 27, 2022, yesterday. Here’s a quote from rollingstone.com about the song and video:
‘ Fly planes. Make us cry. Look stunning while doing it. Lady Gaga can just do it all. On Friday, the Chromatica singer released the music video for “Hold My Hand,” the lead single from the Top Gun: Maverick film soundtrack.
Gaga shared an emotional explanation for the BloodPop-produced single on Twitter. “When I wrote this song for Top Gun: Maverick, I didn’t even realize the multiple layers it spanned across the film’s heart, my own psyche, and the nature of the world we’ve been living in,” Lady Gaga explained. “I’ve been working on it for years, perfecting it, trying to make it ours. I wanted to make music into a song where we share our deep need to both be understood and try to understand each other — a longing to be close when we feel so far away and an ability to celebrate life’s heroes.” ‘
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And here is a quote from the lyrics to song ‘Hold My Hand’:
Hold my hand, everything will be okay
I heard from the heavens that clouds have been grey
Pull me close, wrap me in your aching arms
I see that you’re hurtin’, why’d you take so long
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And now, my comment for watching music video ‘Hold My Hand’: I am going to use a quote from wikipedia:
Top Gun: Maverick premiered at CinemaCon on April 28, 2022, and was theatrically released in the United States on May 27, 2022, by Paramount Pictures in IMAX, 4DX,[7] ScreenX[8] and Dolby Cinema.[9] The film received widespread praise from critics, who commended the direction, action sequences, visuals, emotional weight, and performances; many deemed it superior to the first film.
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The point I’m trying to make is that it’s a movie made for entertainment. Even though people may use it the way they want to, you don’t have to give the emotional responses such a movie encourages you to make any seriousness. And that is also the same for it’s music video ‘Hold My Hand’. Even if watching the music video encourages you to commit to certain emotional responses, and even though many people use the music video seriously, you don’t have to do such things. You can just watch it.
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Now, the trailer that I am going to recommend to you, now that’s what I’m talking about. It’s science fiction, and it’s entertaining to watch. When I watched it for the 1st time earlier today, my body tingled. When I watched it for the 2nd time, and I only watched it twice as of now, my body tingled, but only at the end of the trailer, when it presented it’s name. The name of the trailer is ‘Willow (Disney+) Teaser Trailer HD – Fantasy series’. I found it using my ‘signed in’ youtube homepage. And this is how I found it: When I look for trailers, I would use my youtube ‘signed in’ homepage, and I would ‘right click’/select the publishers that have published within the past week. After 7 or so selections, I would then look at the tabs that I created, and see if any of the new selections are worth considering. One of those new tabs were for publisher ‘TV Promos’. I selected that tab, select ‘VIDEOS’, and that’s how I found the trailer for ‘Willow’. It was published May 26, 2022, less than 2 days ago.
As I said before, as I watched it, my body tingled. In my opinion, for a tv show trailer, it has impressive fantasy special effects, and it’s obvious theme, good versus evil, was entertaining to watch. I highly recommend that you watch the ‘Willow’ trailer.
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How:
It is now 11:08 AM EST for me.
Idea ‘How’ uses a scene from episode 5.15 ‘Deep Space Homer’ from animated tv series ‘The Simpsons(1994)’. Here is a short quote from wikipedia.org about the episode:
‘ Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin and musician James Taylor guest-starred as themselves. The episode parodies the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey. ‘
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And here is a quote from ‘The Simpsons Wiki’:
‘ Both Buzz Aldrin and James Taylor received praise for their guest performances. IGN ranked James Taylor as being the twenty-first best guest appearance in the show’s history. ‘
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If you have the streaming service ‘Disneyplus’, the episode is available there without need for additional payment. I’m going to use Amazon.com’s streaming service to quote that Simpson’s episode. The scene starts, according to Amazon Video, 19 minutes and 33 seconds into the episode. Here is the quote:
Homer Simpson: ‘Oh, Aw, stupid bar!’
Buzz Aldrin: ‘Wait, Homer. If that bar holds, we just might make it back to Earth.’
Homer: ‘Hmm. And I’ll bash you good!’
(Both astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Race Banyon stop Homer from taking that bar out, the bar that is holding the door closed.)
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Here’s the definition of ‘how’ that I’m using for this advice from dictionary.com:
about the manner, condition, or way in which:
I don’t care how you leave your desk when you go. Be careful how you act.
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Here’s the definition of ‘How’ using the illustration reference that is used to create it: Both Homer Simpson and Buzz Aldrin have 2 different uses of ‘How’ for the interpretation of the bar that is holding the door in place. So, let’ say that the neutral identity is the bar holding the door in place, and Homer Simpson is using one interpretation of ‘how’ for it, and Buzz Aldrin has another interpretation of ‘how’ for that bar. The reason I chose that ‘Simpson’s’ scene is that one ‘how’, as far as cartoon animation goes, is created by Buzz Aldrin, who was actually a real astronaut, and Homer Simpson, who by tv show standards, was just recently trained to be an astronaut, but has almost no actual experience. That allows you, by intent, to easily imagine Homer Simpson’s ‘how’, and Buzz Aldrin’s ‘how’ for that bar holding the door.
When you use your strategy to evaluate experienced instigations, idea ‘How’, it’s intent’, is to help you change the ‘how’ presented by experienced instigations, and to help you assign different ‘how’s’ when developing your strategy. The more you use idea ‘How’, the more useful you may see that it is.
All right. Let’s use the example of using water in America as an example of changing the ‘how’. People use water to take a shower, to wash their cars, even water is used from the bathroom sink to put into a coffee pot in order to make coffee. After all, water is supposedly drinkable right from the sink, but I think a lot of people use filters now to drink faucet/tap water. The water is purified from it’s source, but it still has to travel through a lot of pipes before it gets to your faucet. For example, here’s a quick comment quote about the Brita water filter:
‘ writing to you straight from the polluted hills of west virginia, this filter changed my tap water completely. wv water is like flint except people care about us even less. i’m not saying this will cure your coal sludge water back in the deep hills, you should probably just invest in bottled water there, but for my gross tap water it did wonders. lasts a long time too imo. do recommend ‘
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My point is that people use water for many different things, and they decide ‘how’ that water is more specifically used.
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Not effective:
It is now 12:27 PM EST for me.
Here’s the plan: I’m going to introduce you to idea ‘Not effective’ so that you can use idea ‘How’ to allow you to sense instigation induced ineffectiveness from your strategy, yet you have the option to not use that sense of ineffectiveness. The intent is that that will make more sense as I give you illustration examples. The 1st illustration example will be from something that I imagined, and the rest will be from selected scenes from the tv series ‘The Man Who Fell to Earth(2022)’ starring Chiwetel Ejiofor as the alien Faraday. The show is currently available streaming from Showtime, and Showtime is available as a channel from Amazon.com.
The 1st illustration example for idea ‘Not effective’ is something that I imagined is happening in certain grammar school study groups. To be clear, I just imagined it. I don’t have anyone working for me, giving me information. I just imagined that it happened. Here’s the story: Let’s say that 3 boys are in a study group, and the rest are girls. The study group consists of all kids, and they fill a normal classroom size. After addressing a certain topic, all of the students are now sitting quietly, except one of the boys. He is trying to get the attention of the girls, and the girls act annoyed by it, and they want him to stop. The other 2 boys in the study group are not doing anything wrong.
So, let’s have an explanation of that event from some of those girls, and then from the boy. After that incident, some of those girls decided to complain about that boy to the teacher moderator. When talking to that teacher, they explained that the boy is causing them to feel uncomfortable, and they requested that the boy be replaced with another boy.
Now, in a separate situation, the boy is explaining to the teacher moderator that the girls are working together, intentionally withholding certain forms of discovered wisdom, and they don’t want to share that wisdom to the boys in the classroom, which is why he is causing them to feel uncomfortable.
So, the ‘Not effective’ illustration example I have chosen is the complaint that the girls made about the boy. If the girls are using idea ‘How’ and ‘Not effective’, they may be able to experience that sense of ineffectiveness caused by the boy, and yet choose to not use that sense of ineffectiveness. Similar phrases, yet in my opinion not exactly the same, that also help is ‘Turning the other cheek’ and ‘Be a good sport’.
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All right. It is now 1:25 PM EST for me. The 1st illustration example, in tv show order, using Amazon.com’s Showtime from Prime Video Channels, is in episode 1.2 ‘Unwashed and Somewhat Slightly Dazed’ from tv series ‘The Man Who Fell to Earth(2022)’. According to Amazon Video, refurbished with inaproprieities removed, that scene starts 14 minutes and 10 seconds into the episode, Spencer Clay(Jimmi Simpson) is talking to another person over the phone over some computer order. Here is the quote:
Spencer Clay: ‘This is Spencer Clay, staff operations.
man on phone: ‘Uh-huh.’
Spencer Clay: ‘I’m looking at a transfer file for a pallet of C-93 drives, ordered by the DO to be shipped to the Sahel region.’
man on phone: ‘Is that Africa?’
Spencer: ‘That’s North Africa, yes. That’s correct.’
man on phone: ‘We don’t have any, man.’
Spencer: ‘Okay, well, that’s gonna be a problem ’cause those drives only work in agency workstations.’
man on phone: ‘C-93? Those ones were phased out.’
Spencer: ‘C-93, yeah.’
man on phone: ‘Yeah, like, eight months ago.’
Spencer: ‘I’m not aware of that.’
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If the conversation was not interrupted, Spencer would continue to say ‘I’m not aware of that.’ to that man on the phone, with the intent to cause that man to cause Spencer to feel a sense of ineffectiveness. Here is a quick character analysis of Spencer Clay, based on the 4 episodes that I watched so far that are currently available: Spencer Clay, in my opinion, causes people to feel and causes people to inflict a sense of ineffectiveness, as identified by the tv show. I call Spencer Clay an ineffective inducing masochist. The definition of ‘masochist’ used here from dictionary.com is ‘a person who is gratified by pain, degradation, etc., that is self-imposed or imposed by others.’ .
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The 2nd illustration example is from that same episode, the way Spencer Clay communicates with the waitress Daisy(Jayne Aguire). The scene used for this advice, according to Amazon Video, starts 16 minutes and 44 seconds into the episode. Here is the quote:
Spencer: ‘I said lime, Daisy. I said lime. Were you listening? Lime. Did you know lime’s the green one? I think maybe you should repeat after me. Lime is the green one.’
Daisy: ‘Yeah, the green one.’
Drew Finch: (muffled laugh)
Spencer: ‘Hey, Dais… Daisy? You can actually bring that back. I’ll… I’ll have it. It’s fine.’
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There are 2 illustration examples simultaneously expressed in that scene. One of them is Spencer Clay causing Daisy to experience ineffectiveness, the other one is Drew Finch’s performance, muffling her laughter as to how Spencer Clay is treating Daisy. The ineffectiveness coming from Drew Finch is how Drew Finch’s character compares with character Captain Kathryn Janeway from tv series ‘Star Trek: Voyager’, since actress Kate Mulgrew portrayed both those characters. If you choose to compare Drew Finch to Captain Kathryn Janeway, it is like Drew Finch is an evil Janeway from the Mirror Universe. To be clear, Drew Finch is not evil, but the comparison between Drew Finch and Kathryn Janeway makes Drew Finch look evil, and that is the ineffectiveness I am referring to, that Drew Finch looks evil compared to Kathryn Janeway.
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Guilty not able:
It is now 2:05 PM EST for me.
Since I want to finish this idea today, I have to stop quoting from tv series ‘The Man Who Fell to Earth’, and I have to at least try to explain idea ‘Guilty not able’. If I don’t finish explaining it, I’m still going to close this list today. So, here it goes:
Guilty:
Idea ‘Guilty’ comes from how I imagined instigator groups from certain companies/corporations/jobs fundamentally learn from their years of experience exposure of management meetings that involve certain members, their obvious ‘guilty’ actions from within the company. All of those years of experience of management meetings involving their guilty actions, compared to employees who are not in their instigation groups, have given those instigation group members a high tolerance for feeling guilty. Not all of them, but some of those instigation group members who still choose to instigate innocent employees may use that high tolerance to feel guilty to inflict a sense of feeling guilty as part of their instigation experience to innocent employees. For example, and I don’t like doing this without an illustration, it’s like someone feeling guilty, but that person has done nothing wrong. Another example is instigation causing a person to feel very stringent without tolerance, and then when that is established, to cause that person to feel guilty based on an interpretation that has no obligation to have involvement, and yet because of that stringency use, that innocent person still is bothered by that feeling of guilt.
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Not able:
Idea ‘Not able’ is from an idea I created in a previous list. I think I also called that idea ‘Not able’: A father gives his son an assignment, the father is portrayed by celebrity Djimon Hounsou, his son is 5 to 8 years old, his son says ‘I can’t!’, indicating that, after he tried to, he could not complete the assignment, and soon after informing his father that he cannot complete the assignment, his father presents himself as Merlin by wearing a white beard and magic hat. As an illustration example for idea ‘Not able’, you may used refurbished for advice episode 7.15 ‘Lower Decks’ from sci-fi tv series ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation(1994)’. The episode is available streaming from Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, that scene starts 28 minutes and 42 seconds into the episode. Here is the quote:
Lieutenant Worf(Michael Dorn): ‘You did not anticipate.’
Sito Jaxa(Shannon Fill): (taking off blindfold) ‘How am I supposed to defend myself when I can’t see a thing?’
Worf: ‘Stop making excuses. Replace the blindfold.’
Sito Jaxa: ‘No! It’s not a fair test.’
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29 minutes and 22 seconds into the episode:
Sito Jaxa: ‘Sir… is there really such a thing?’
Worf: ‘No, there is not, but perhaps next time you are judged unfairly it will not take so many bruises for you to protest.’
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It is now 2:43 PM EST for me.
Idea ‘Guilty not able’ is the ability to sense being guilty, and to sense contemplationally not being able, instigation related of course, and to choose to not use such a sense. I know that ‘Rome wasn’t built in a day’, so the important thing is to be aware of this idea, and I plan to make more ideas to help you use and understand more ideas ‘Guilty’ and ‘Not able’.
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It is now 2:46 PM EST for me. I am going to close this list now. I plan to give you more idea(s) next Saturday. For example, the current idea I am using is called ‘Not able keep up guilty’. When contemplationally said, it is ‘Keep up guilty’. I may explain that next Saturday, but based on past performance, I’ll probably create other ideas up until next Saturday, and I may explain them instead, or something else. So, if you are there next Saturday, I’ll see you then.
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Rated TV-14 animated violence, viewer discretion for tv series ‘The Simpsons’. TV-MA mature themes(I’m guessing that’s for episodes that have yet to be aired), violence, viewer discretion for tv series ‘The Man Who Fell to Earth’. Sci-fi violence, viewer discretion for tv series ‘Willow’. Rated TV-PG sci-fi violence, viewer discretion for tv series ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’. Use only refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of episode and series. [Use mental bookmarks ‘How’, ‘Not effective’, ‘Guilty’, ‘Not able’, and ‘Guilty not able’ for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.