You should play BioShock. Help stimulate the economy, buy a PS3 (or 360) and plunk down $20-30 bones for BioShock. It's so worth it (at least, the $20-30 bucks for the game... hell, I'll let you borrow my copy).
Anyway, I'm posting a digression to your original post, but that's the first thing I thought of.
i think i would enjoy playing video games, but i'm not ready to make the time or money commitment.
which sort of brings me to a subject i want to write about - around the idea that it is impossible to keep up with information these days. i feel like even in the 1970s, the filmmakers had seen a great percentage of all the movies ever produced. also, famously, i think there was a guy in the 18th century who claimed to have read every book ever printed. today - it is impossible to keep up with just the current stuff, much less all the historical and foreign films and certainly not books....to be cont...
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You should play BioShock. Help stimulate the economy, buy a PS3 (or 360) and plunk down $20-30 bones for BioShock. It's so worth it (at least, the $20-30 bucks for the game... hell, I'll let you borrow my copy).
Anyway, I'm posting a digression to your original post, but that's the first thing I thought of.
i think i would enjoy playing video games, but i'm not ready to make the time or money commitment.
which sort of brings me to a subject i want to write about - around the idea that it is impossible to keep up with information these days. i feel like even in the 1970s, the filmmakers had seen a great percentage of all the movies ever produced. also, famously, i think there was a guy in the 18th century who claimed to have read every book ever printed. today - it is impossible to keep up with just the current stuff, much less all the historical and foreign films and certainly not books....to be cont...
Indeed. To put bluntly: there is too much shit out there.
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