Southern guy probably was eating a Vidalia onion. The soil is low in sulfur, I believe, and has a more neutral acidity, so the onion is pretty uniquely sweet. I heard one older southerner call them dirt apples.
thumbman
Look into commercial displays.
Haha! I think this is a good spot to share the baguette scene from Atlanta: https://youtu.be/UtaML9D2p8k?si=EbsU8Rni_x0xurCL
Okay hear me out... physically print the documents then, using a high resolution scanner, make a digital copy and finally use a raster to vector convertor.
I know this is probably dumb, but I just wanted to throw this out there.
Noice.
Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer.
The book felt like a constant epiphany. I wanted to rekindle my relationship with nature and it helped me understand land stewardship in a way that I wasn't able to grasp. The author connects nature and science so well that nature's magic doesnt get lost in the scientific rigour. It also doesn't shame the reader for their past or background, and was thoughtful and optimistic. The audio book is also read by the author which is great.
Thanks for the info! An "interview" process makes me nervous.
Gob's not on board.
Blockers to block blockers. insert Xzibit meme
Thanks BTW.
When younger I was so confused by the Lynch version, but the visuals of gluttony, purity, capitalism, and overall vastness in the scenery fascinated me.
I do hope someday we figure out interdimensional travel so we can find a universe where the Jodorowsky film was made. Still we have some art by H.R. Giger, that looks incredible, from the effort.
I love this story, loved the books, the movie was visually fantastic, but it took me three viewings to get through it. I don't know if my attention could handle the dense nature of it in a film format. Does anyone else think it would have been more digestible as an 6-8 part series? Still great to see this level of sci-fi in film.
This looks like a demon turned SpongeBob into a comforter set.