I mentioned in an earlier post that a vast majority of the MMD dance numbers on You Tube use stock dance choreography. There was some lamenting in the comments regarding this.
Note that 'vast majority' is not all.
Also, I think there are some official motion capture files for a few songs but for the rest of the dance videos there are some MMDers that do the original choreography that are downloaded by the bulk of the hobbyists that do that particular subset of videos. The original choreographers are generally credited in the videos. Note that there seems to be a high importance, at least in Japan placed on getting the dance moves to match the official music videos...it may be a cultural thing.
However there are some completely original arrangements as well, particularly in MMD vids that are not exclusively dance numbers..
This one was done over 6 years ago and I'm pretty sure that its animation was not frame grabbed from some Garnidelia video.
This seems to be by the same individual, and is in the same vein, albeit with an emphasis on...escalation.
As a bonus, both teach important life lessons!
Below is one refreshingly devoid of any lessons at all. I'm pretty sure that its animation does not closely follow any William Tell dance videos either.
Finally there's one classic that has been pulled from You Tube, ostensibly for DCMA reasons, but given the plethora of videos of versions of that song on You Tube, its probably due to...well, see for yourself.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Sat Oct 28 00:20:18 2017 (3bBAK)
3
I, too, think it's different. The 11 does not have much of escalation, more of continuation. And it is resolved by
Sakaki preserving and petting the grey cat with one hand while he's busy biting the other, whereas Len
gives up and retreats.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Sat Oct 28 10:17:00 2017 (LZ7Bg)
4
DailyMotion's geolocating of ads is disturbingly accurate.
Posted by: Mauser at Sat Oct 28 14:21:01 2017 (TYvUn)
Well this Catalonian secession situation certainly seems to be escalating.
Spain was plunged into crisis Friday as Madrid seized power from independence-seeking Catalonia,
The previous vote for independence was a vote to begin coordinating with Spain on a peaceful transition to an independent Catalonia. Given that the response from the Spanish government has been an emphatic "NO!", Catalonias regional parliament today flat out declared independence, to much cheering from the Catlans and jeering from the rest of Spain. The Spanish government responded by declaring the Catalan Parliament void, dissolving it, charging the Catalan PM and several MPs with felonies and declaring that there will be an election on December 21. The Catalonians, in defiance of Madrid, have called for civil disobedience in response.
It's a good thing that Spanish Civil Wars aren't human abattoirs that historically have tended to foreshadow even darker times to follow around the world...
He who fights monsters should see to it that he himself does not become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you.
— Friedrich Nietzsche: Beyond Good and Evil
The best revenge is not to be like your enemy.
— Marcus Aurelius: Meditations
As soon as men decide that all means are permitted to fight an evil, then their good becomes indistinguishable from the evil that they set out to destroy.
— Christopher Dawson
The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
Miku Miku DanceVideos (at least those that are basically music videos) frequently use stock choreography downloads which essentially rotoscope the official music videos of the songs. The one above does as well, but I do like the fact that the animator added and animated the girl with the guitar.
The one below likewise adds a few non stock elements to the standard choreography and the costumes are particularly well done.
Shinzo Abe's LDP party has just won the two thirds majority in Japan's legislature needed to amend their constitution and thus is expected to amend or rescind article 9 of Japan's constitution. This ought not to cause too much alarm, as a nation unable to use military force to defend itself and its allies is not really a nation as much as it is a vassal of whoever it is allied with. However, the Japanese let this stand all through the cold war and Abe is not particularly loved in Japan. The fact that things are going to worms in East Asia to such an extent that the generally pacifist Japanese public is signing off on this now...with Abe as its standard bearer is a worrying sign.
Chinese president Xi Jinping has had himself and his platform written into the Chinese Communist Party charter at the recent 19th Communist Party congress. He had previously reversed Deng Xoaoping's post Mao policy of checks and balances via a division of authority by having himself named the head of basically every department/ministry. He is now listed as one of the 3 great leaders along with Deng Xiaoping and, more worryingly, the greatest mass murderer in history. The Party unanimously voted to remove all of the Deng era restrictions on how many executive positions he can hold, term limits and retirement age and formalizes his already de facto status as absolute head of state, head of the Chinese Communist Party and leader of the People's Liberation Army.
In surely unrelated news, it appears that China is fitting their new Coast Guard cutters for ramming(!?)
The Communist Party’s People’s Daily made the purpose of these ships crystal-clear, stating they were designed to have "the power to smash into a vessel weighing more than 20,000 tons and will not cause any damage to itself when confronting a vessel weighing under 9,000 tons. It can also destroy a 5,000-ton ship and sink it to the sea floor.â€
The rest of the linked article postulates a major Chinese Military adventure either against Taiwan or Japan (ultimately both) starting around 2020. That opinion piece is backed up up by several other articles published over recent years.
In other China news, As part of his general crackdown on all things double-plus ungood, the new party Chairman will oversee the implementation of social infrastructures heretofore only dreamed of by the Stasi. Yes, social media will finally make the telescreen a reality!
Over 4,000 Facebook users have RSVP'd—another 33,000 are interested in attending—to the Nov. 8 event being held in Boston that is literally titled "Scream helplessly at the sky on the anniversary of the election."
Remember that Grape the Penguin will not have to deal with any of this.
1
Well, things can always get worse, you need to look at the bright side. It looks like the Saudis are building a pseudo-arcology named Neom that will focus on Biotech and advanced AI. The Saudis, who are also big investors in the Vision fund, expect Neom to be a major concern in the 2030s.
Possibly relevant
Posted by: stargazera5 at Wed Oct 25 19:50:50 2017 (0oc59)
Oh. We've Got TWO!NASA has recently noticed a heretofore undocumented moon that has apparently been squatting here undetected for some time. Due to NASA's limited border enforcement budget and the fact that the interloper's arrival predated the Johnson-Reed Act by about a decade, it is not (as of now) going to be deported.
It's unclear how the change in the number of dependents will affect Earth's Tax status.
RWBY's Final Season Begins
Immediately we get confirmation that team RNGR as a group has important and oft overlooked habits which are absolutely necessary for those who would protect themselves and others.
Good trigger discipline and always checking one's targets.
This episode picks up exactly where the last episode of last season left off, with no time-skip. In fact, most of this episode takes place hours before the very end of last season's final episode. Most of the titular cast is still scattered to the four winds but we do get a bit of exposition that provides Ruby herself and her B team with some perspective and a new goal.
Alas, this is far more helpful information to their enemy, who now knows everything they know.Blake is still on another continent, Weiss is still de-remittanced, hunted and (unknown to them or her) en route to their general location in possession of an important bit of information
Ironwood has her sister working as an agent in Mistral...and he speciffically said he did not trust Lionheart...
Yang's subplot has taken an unexpected turn...
...literally, she must have done a U-turn after taking that right in the closing credits.
She seems to have changed her mind, and is not going to Mistral to join Ruby and company, but rather to hunt down her mother. She also seems to be having issues with her left (real) arm. She provides the only fight in the episode, a very one-sided one.
The only thing that really indicates a new season is that there has been another of the show's annual upgrades in quality; production values are visibly better.
This is actually a couple of screencaps from a still pan, but the attention to detail is remarkable, especially when one remembers the "shadow people" of the first season.
There is no spectacular opening fight as there has been every other season, and indeed only one punch is thrown. Improved backgrounds notwithstanding, the season is not so much beginning as the show is continuing, with last season's conclusion feeling even more like a midseason finale. The show, however, remains enjoyable and still looks promising.
I Gather My Hero Academia Has a Large Female Fan Following
I base this entirely upon the gender composition of the MMD dance parodies.
This one is unusual, in not only having one female cast member, but two (OK, one and a half).
The show itself remains uneven in pacing but quite enjoyable and surprisingly intelligent given its silly premise. It's on hiatus now but has had a third season greenlit, which I must say is quite welcome news.
1
What? Everyone's got to learn somehow, and that video didn't seem condescending to me. Heck, I already knew how to use a tape measure, but the "how to draw a perfect circle" was new to me, not that I don't already know a couple of ways to do it.
Posted by: Rick C at Tue Oct 10 16:17:47 2017 (ECH2/)
2
I took a look at the other "How To" vids they've got on YooToob. While I'm not entirely sure why you have to take the battery out of your screwgun when you're changing a bit, the circular saw one was actually quite useful. I mean, I had no idea they were actually battery powered now!
Posted by: Wonderduck at Tue Oct 10 20:10:22 2017 (pvQmD)
3
My guess is to avoid the possibility (big corporations are afraid of potential liability issues!) of you drilling yourself by mistake.
Posted by: Rick C at Tue Oct 10 20:59:33 2017 (ITnFO)
4
Wonderduck, everything is battery-powered, now. I have an electric lawnmower. The new version is battery-powered and rechargeable. My dad has a battery-powered chainsaw.
Posted by: Ben at Tue Oct 10 21:22:08 2017 (ee6LA)
5
Yet at the Lazy B Ranch, everything is pneumatic. Except the flashlights....
(Obscure nickname for my workplace).
Posted by: Mauser at Tue Oct 10 21:26:08 2017 (TYvUn)
6
"Every warning in the manual came out of a lawsuit".
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Tue Oct 10 23:16:44 2017 (tgyIO)
1
Wow, time flies, I remember looking at when this would be and thinking "oh, not for a while" and now here it comes!
From that preview, it looks like the rendering has taken another big step in quality.
Posted by: David at Mon Oct 9 17:06:34 2017 (HWHxc)
Hide All the Archdukes
The British Royal Navy's new aircraft Carrier, HMS Queen Elizabeth is not due to begin flight trials until late next year and is expected to be fully operational in 2020. However, given the situation with the DPRK, the Royal Navy is now looking at the possibility of sending the ship to the area around the Koreas on short notice, before flight trials have even started. Presumably the trip to the other side of the world would be quite the shakedown cruise.
This is a reminder that the Korean War, is still technically, legally going on (though there is a cease fire in effect) and that the war is actually a U.N. war, so if it goes hot, it can potentially drag in an awful lot of countries.
1
1) A fresh video from 2016, you can see Kuzya in the background, so taken during its cruise to Syria
2) A 3-star Admiral giving orders personally from the bridge trololololo
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Fri Oct 6 08:50:27 2017 (LZ7Bg)
It Appears That the Nonspeciffic "You" Referenced in the Last Post Was NOT Kidding
Those, in or around Tallahassee and Apalachicola; this weekend might be a good time to take a roadtrip to Kansas.
The yellow thing is just thunderstorms with a 10% chance of developing into something obnoxious. The item marked in red that is currently lining up on New Orleans is described as having a 70% chance of developing into a tropical cyclone.
Having missed that, I actually watched episode 4 and I can say that three quarters of the episodes thus far have not reeked of vomit and shame. In fact the three I've seen have all been quite solidly mediocre.
This is a by the numbers Star Trek show that appears to have been written by the perfectly straightforward method of recording week night sessions of Star Trek the Role-Playing Game, where the house rules include "no transporters" and two of the players really just want to play Starfleet Battles, so the GM sets up a separate Hex map for them in the table next to the wet bar.
At least that's what it feels like.
It's REALLY not high art, but I'm going to keep rolling the dice on this show for now.
Posted by: Mauser at Tue Oct 3 22:42:17 2017 (TYvUn)
3
So far I like the show. They may have front-loaded the fart jokes to an extent.
Episode 3 was a better version of TNG's
The Outcast
, and 4 was a pretty good version of TOS'
For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky.
Spoilers to protect those episodes, not the old ones.
Posted by: Rick C at Wed Oct 4 13:55:07 2017 (ECH2/)
4
Aww, man, I was sure I put those spoiler tags in right.
Posted by: Rick C at Wed Oct 4 13:55:49 2017 (ECH2/)
5
Rick: "Episode 3 was a better version of TNG's (spoiler)" I disagree, even though I disliked that TNG episode, and the reason is: the 5th-season TNG episode took a well-developed character and put him into a situation that challenged his attitudes and the audience's expectations. Its failures were arguably due to not being able to get away with more in 1992.
The corresponding Orville episode fails largely because no one put any real thought into it (and, yes, I've read detailed spoilers of how it's resolved).
How does Bortus' species reproduce? As presented, two 'males' come together and produce an egg. Bortus' mate was a sex-changed 'female', but unless all successful matings require one partner to be a former 'female' (not suggested in the episode, I don't think), then there is no biological function for a 'female'. And if one is required, then 'she' hasn't actually been sex-changed into a 'male', just bulked up to look 'male', and their entire society is a fraud. But both the parents and the ship's doctor immediately recognize the child as a just-like-humans female, and the doc's understanding of the operation to be performed is to change her into a just-like-humans male. For more fun, she (IIRC) tosses off a line about females being born only once every 70 years or so, which makes the whole thing sound less like a biological sex issue and more like a translation error: what they call 'female' can't be what humans call female.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Wed Oct 4 15:22:41 2017 (tgyIO)
Marvel and DC don't even NEED to turn a profit anymore. They are now idea factories and copyright farms for Time Warner and Disney to whom the budget of Marvel is a rounding error.The notion that driving away their former audience is going to have any effect upon their editorial decision making is delusional. Furthermore, these reports of declining sales are based largely on Diamond's sales figures, which are not going to show, say, Amazon sales. Comic stores are just another type of brick and mortar store that is being bypassed by direct, online sales so the sales figures for the actual companies may not be as low as is assumed.
Furthermore, the comics themselves are loss leaders. I was reminded of this by a post by a comic professional on a private board. Trade paperbacks are where comics make money nowadays. That is, the comics themselves don't really make money anymore. (I used to know this, but haven't worked in the industry for years).
Pretty much the only people who buy those are those who frequent comic shops, the hardcore fans who are the object of the SJWs hate. Newer fans, and casual readers buy the trade paperbacks, which remain in print (thanks to modern printing technologies) pretty much in perpetuity. A comic doesn't make money. A trade paperback ordered on Amazon does.
I've talked to people in the industry who would know and paperbacks are actually selling pretty well. Indeed, the declining comic sales have no bearing on this because trades are the new way of buying comics...one picks up the trade paperback on Amazon. One industry professional described the new business model as very similar to the Japanese Manga industry, with the individual comics taking the place of the big manga "phone books" as loss leaders. The trade paperbacks here are the American equivalent of the manga complilations...that's what people buy, and the profit on each book actually increases with time as the number of trade paperback editions grows. Trade paperbacks thus work sort of like like compound interest, and in fact they are generally the way that web comics make money.
So while it may be very satisfying to believe that the editors who hate us with every fiber of their being might be forced by economic reality to not make Captain America a Nazi, the fact is that this has not hurt them at all.
Marvel and D.C. are doing exceedingly well. They have cultivated an entirely new fan base which is making them money. This is good business. That these SJWs did so by treating their long time fans with the kindness and respect that a spoiled child demonstrates in pulling the wings off a junebug, is sad.
What is sadder still is a bunch of adults gloating over comic book stores suffering. They had no control over the editorial decisions that many of us find vexing nor the technological innovations that have bypassed them. Their demise will not hurt the big comic companies in any way and will almost certainly (given the demographics of comic store owners) give SJWs a wry smile and cruel chuckle. It will not affect the bottom line of Marvel and DC in any way.
So don't expect multimillion dollar corporations to come crawling back to atone for not catering to us. That is the impotent fantasy of grade school looser. Instead, take some satisfaction that they did a good job with the Wonder Woman movie, and they haven't screwed up Squirrel Girl yet.
Failing that go out and create your own. Or send some of that comic money this guy's way.
Or sit on your duff and wait for Marvel and DC to collapse...but if you do that, you may want to get a book or something. 'Cause it's gonna be a long wait.
1
Ok, question: if nobody's buying (say) Thorette comics in the shops, then who's buying the compilations? Are SJWs rushing out to buy comics they'd previously disdained now that there's a trans Spiderwoman (or whatever?)
Posted by: Rick C at Mon Oct 2 14:58:58 2017 (ECH2/)
NOPE!Guess again! (While my secret identity is something I keep close to the vest, I assure you that it is not Victor Sage...whose alias should always be capitalized.) HINT: I'm actually a comic book super-villain (no really). As to the rest of your inquiry, it's probably people who don't show up in comic book stores. Also, given the price of comic book single issues, the fact that they are awkward and expensive to store, and trade paperbacks are just books one puts on a shelf, a LOT of people are just buying the trades. Those can be gotten from Amazon easier than a comic store and the people who are into the SJW world view are often not going to be hanging out in a comic store, so it's a completely different demographic than we run into. Ordinarily, this would be a good thing, expanding the market with new titles and demographics is objectively good. The grief arose where this was quite explicitly not about just bringing new people in, but pushing us out. Finally it should be noted that while not all of the reimagined superheroes have been badly done (The new Blue Beetle worked quite well) ALL of them have elicited howls of protest from people who were emotionally invested in characters that they could see themselves in. The new audiences are interested for that same reason. These are characters who they can see themselves as and so they're picking up these books for the same reason we, as awkward alienated teens did. It would be better if more of these books were written as something other than check boxes on a Benneton ad. It would have been better still if this shift had not had such contempt for the long time fans behind it. The point is that there is every reason to believe that the up and coming comic book reader is not just as different in their consumption habits from the dwindling number of aging gen Xers as every other Millennial customer segment is. Unlike the editors involved, most of the new fans probably harbor us no ill will any more than we begrudge them their enjoyment of books directed at them. But we only rarely will encounter them because we all hang in different circles....which is contributing to this notion that these companies must be failing, when they most assuredly are not.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Mon Oct 2 17:52:23 2017 (KicmI)
3
Largely, those aren't on sale yet - they tend to lag the individual-issue comics by a good bit to avoid cannibalizing the comic sales. Even beyond that, the number of comics actually affected by this stuff is a pretty small fraction of total comics titles, especially small compared to "total TPBs available from the past few decades".
Sure, it'd affect their ability to draw in new fans - which was already pretty limited by the superhero focus to begin with, mind you. The industry had been busy pigeonholing itself since the 90s. Of course, it's not unlike anime - in the same way that Japan panders to the creepy otaku, the US comic industry has pandered to our own equivalent. I'm going to guess that the intersection between "people who like reading comics about young women with gravity-defying bodies in spandex" and "people who like being judged as horrible human beings for reading comics about young women with gravity-defying bodies in spandex" to be just about zero.
But like you say, the comic book companies make more money through movies than they ever did through actual comics, and they've got a lot of untapped material to work through yet; they'll be selling movies based on comic stories from ten or twenty years ago long enough for everyone now making decisions to retire comfortably. If they aren't managing their companies to keep things rolling fifty years down the road, well, who else is, these days?
The comic shops have long since had to diversify; just about all of the ones I've been to make a lot more off of related goods, gaming stuff, and Magic cards than they do off actual comics. Hell, most of them are really Magic card shops that happen to have a side line in comics...
Posted by: Avatar_exADV at Mon Oct 2 21:19:17 2017 (/lg1c)
4
I don't think I've bought single-issue comics since Adam Warren and Toren Smith were doing Dirty Pair.
That was.... A while ago now.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Tue Oct 3 01:11:05 2017 (PiXy!)
5
Are there any actual numbers to support the claim that Marvel is making up for losses in the direct market with trade paperback sales? Their Amazon rankings aren't spectacular, and BookScan has them at 10% of the C/GN market behind Dc at 14% and Viz at 23%.
Posted by: muon at Mon Oct 16 05:16:07 2017 (vMYTH)
6
The numbers do exist. I know for a fact that the comic companies are doing very well. However, I have a non-disclosure agreement with my former employer.
Regarding the publicly available numbers, they are not good data.
Bookscan is bunk.
(Read the whole thing)
Another thing to remember is that TPs are essentially cash in the bank. Printing costs are way lower than they used to be, so once the books are compiled they just sort of make money from then on. Thus even very moderate sales generate more profit than a regular 32 page book.
It would be interesting to know WHAT trade paperbacks are selling. After all, a huge amount of Marvel and DC comics going back decades are for sale in trade paperback form...
I...I...Great Galaxies! If you go to the link, The Watcher is now hocking back issues. So perhaps the end really is nigh !
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Mon Oct 16 16:40:02 2017 (3bBAK)
7
Collen Doran wrote that in 2013, and as she said, Author Central had only linked with BookScan in 2010. It also wouldn't include sales to comic shops, which might also account for the discrepancy. Comichron has the sales figures for TPBs in comic shops, and Amazon has a category for comic books and graphic novels. What most people are interested in is how the diversity titles launched after 2014 are doing as opposed to the classic trades. The first Ms. Marvel TPB seems to be a perennial seller, but the subsequent ones aren't. Patsy Walker aka Hellcat came in at 71 on the Graphic Novel list, but the series was still cancelled.
Posted by: muon at Tue Oct 17 07:16:21 2017 (vMYTH)
Hobby Space News of the commercial space industry A Babe In The Universe Rather Eclectic Cosmology Encyclopedia Astronautica Superb spacecraft resource The Unwanted Blog Scott Lowther blogs about forgotten aerospace projects and sells amazingly informative articles on the same. Also, there are cats. Transterrestrial Musings Commentary on Infinity...and beyond! Colony WorldsSpace colonization news! The Alternate Energy Blog It's a blog about alternate energy (DUH!) Next Big Future Brian Wang: Tracking our progress to the FUTURE. Nuclear Green Charles Barton, who seems to be either a cool curmudgeon, or a rational hippy, talks about energy policy and the terrible environmental consequences of not going nuclear Energy From Thorium Focuses on the merits of thorium cycle nuclear reactors WizBang Current events commentary...with a wiz and a bang The Gates of Vienna Tenaciously studying a very old war The Anchoress insightful blogging, presumably from the catacombs Murdoc Online"Howling Mad Murdoc" has a millblog...golly! EaglespeakMaritime security matters Commander Salamander Fullbore blackshoe blogging! Belmont Club Richard Fernandez blogs on current events BaldilocksUnderstated and interesting blog on current events The Dissident Frogman French bi-lingual current events blog The "Moderate" VoiceI don't think that word means what they think it does....but this lefty blog is a worthy read nonetheless. Meryl Yourish News, Jews and Meryls' Views Classical Values Eric Scheie blogs about the culture war and its incompatibility with our republic. Jerry Pournell: Chaos ManorOne of Science fictions greats blogs on futurism, current events, technology and wisdom A Distant Soil The website of Colleen Dorans' superb fantasy comic, includes a blog focused on the comic industry, creator issues and human rights. John C. Wright The Sci-Fi/ Fantasy writer muses on a wide range of topics. Now Read This! The founder of the UK Comics Creators Guild blogs on comics past and present. The Rambling Rebuilder Charity, relief work, roleplaying games Rats NestThe Art and rantings of Vince Riley Gorilla Daze Allan Harvey, UK based cartoonist and comics historian has a comicophillic blog! Pulpjunkie Tim Driscoll reviews old movies, silents and talkies, classics and clunkers. Suburban Banshee Just like a suburban Leprechaun....but taller, more dangerous and a certified genius. Satharn's Musings Through TimeThe Crazy Catlady of The Barony of Tir Ysgithr アニ・ノート(Ani-Nouto) Thoughtful, curmudgeonly, otakuism that pulls no punches and suffers no fools. Chizumatic Stephen Den Beste analyzes anime...with a microscope, a slide rule and a tricorder. Wonderduck Anime, Formula One Racing, Sad Girls in Snow...Duck Triumphalism Beta Waffle What will likely be the most thoroughly tested waffle evah! Zoopraxiscope Too In this thrilling sequel to Zoopraxiscope, Don, Middle American Man of Mystery, keeps tabs on anime, orchids, and absurdities. Mahou Meido MeganekkoUbu blogs on Anime, computer games and other non-vital interests Twentysided More geekery than you can shake a stick at Shoplifting in the Marketplace of Ideas Sounds like Plaigarism...but isn't Ambient IronyAll Meenuvians Praise the lathe of the maker! Hail Pixy!!