Powerpoint Karaoke was amazing, so many quotable lines: This is Spoopifer, Spoopifer 2, Spoopifer 3, Rock Spoopifer, Fire Spoopifer, Psyduck... "Eruptions happen some nights" And I love how you got the two people who seem the easiest to gross out to watch the Shame Inferno. Such good reactions from the players and the watchers.
I think Graham's Powerpoint Karaoke would have been a LOT better if he did the word emphasis thing that he does in the Dave's Parking lot/ Lumber and lumbar support Crapshots.
Kathleen's edible nightshade question is actually a better hint than expected. because both tomatoes and eggplants are foods you can grow in the garden with Nanako in P4G . :)
Possibly my favorite moment of this whole show was when Alex ceased to function after drinking the powdered peanut butter. Ian is gagging for help, and Alex just *stops* for a very long time, like a hung up and about to crash program that has been fed something it doesn't understand.
41:32 Old Storage Formats: I never owned one, but if my friends' experiences were any indication, Iomega drives/media were notoriously unreliable. The drives also came in three different flavors -- SCSI for Macs (and Amigas), IDE for PC internal drive bays, and parallel port as an external PC device. This last one was unmitigated crap, so naturally it was the most popular. SyQuest predates Iomega by a few years, but their devices weren't very reliable, either. Since it was basically a removable hard drive platter, the major problem was keeping dust out of the mechanism. It lived mostly on the Mac, since it was only available with a SCSI interface. There was also a third removable media format that came very late -- the Castlewood ORB. Like the SyQuest, this was a removable hard drive platter (2GB storage each), but they seemed to have the dust issue better managed. They were also less expensive than SyQuest's equivalent offerings. I ended up buying one of these and a handful of blank media, and used them on a regular basis for a while. They actually worked _mostly_ okay, but alas, Castlewood never caught on and the format (and company) died. 48:45 Video Discs: The format you're thinking of (competitor to the laser VideoDisc) is CED -- Capacitance Electronic Disc, originally developed by RCA. And yes, it was terrible. 50:59 Burning CDs: Is Paul describing the Pioneer CD burner? 'Cause that thing was sensitive as hell. And you could only burn at 1x speed. And you had to disconnect the computer from the network so the machine wouldn't get distracted and let the buffers in the burner drain and leave you with _another_ $5.00 coaster. I got to burn a bunch of CDs with ever-evolving versions of my 3DO game back in the day... Tape is still a viable data storage medium, usually for long-term backups. Reliability is achieved by using high-quality tape and _massive_ amounts of error correction. The current generation is LTO-7. Blank tapes are cheap, but the drives are nasty expensive, and usually need SCSI or SAS controllers. (You guys *do* have a backup regimen for all your data, don't you?)
LS-120 FO LYFE! Christ I remember burning coasters. There was nothing like the sickening feeling of "Did I remember to disable the screen saver?" and not being able to move the mouse to check.
FEA is broadly about bending, as it's one of the deformation modes that FEA can be applied to analyze. The way to think about FEA is testing something before you actually build it, and one way that you'd want to test something is by seeing how far it bent when you applied a force. There's many more applications than this, too, but bending is good for slides.
modern FEM programs can take a large amount of physical forces into account (magnetism, pressure etc). They divide a material into little blocks that are connected rigidly, and calculate what happens to it and how much it pulls on it's neighbors. And they are very useful for modeling complex structures and approximating behavior where continues analytical calculations are either unavailable or will take days to complete. And yes, anytime you see a fancy checkered blue/yellow/red shaded pretty picture that's most likely where it came from. See also CFD, computational fluid dynamics, for calculating the response of fluids around a ship for example. P.S I hope you all indulge me basically repeatin others, I don't get to brag about knowing this stuff often.
holy shit rigid body physics have a use in real life? I learned something today, I was until now under the impression that rigid body was just the most basic model and used for games that have computational limitations
Yeah, they re-recorded the monologue. Which I think was a mistake, honestly. You do a segment live, you kinda commit to accepting whatever mistakes might happen. And if the prompter borks out (which is what happened if anyone's wondering), and everything goes a tad pear shaped for a minute, well, that's the appeal of doing it live, even if you're working off a script: the allure and risk that you're working without a net and something might indeed go wrong. To deny that is, well, you're saying "it's live, and anything could happen", but then you're attaching an asterisk saying "unless the prompter breaks".
We triple... let's say *quadruple*-guessed ourselves on this... I don't think we'd be happy with either result, to be honest, but this is the one we uploaded, so here we are. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
As someone whose worked in live productions before, we would always re-record segments before uploading them online if the person featured in them wasn't happy with how things came out during the broadcast. So, for what it's worth, I think you guys made the right call here. If someone really wants to see the original version they can just go watch it on Twitch anyway. Also, sort of a technical question, but in the original airing, there's a point where Paul realizes the prompter isn't going to cooperate and tries to segue into the intro anyway, which is followed by a solid 25 seconds of people clearly not knowing what to do, I'm just curious why the decision was made not to just run the intro there. Things did seem to work out in the end, as Paul was able to finish his segment, but I feel like Paul set things up in a way that allowed you to "cut your losses" (so to speak) and just run the intro prematurely, and I'm curious why that opportunity wasn't taken. I have no idea what your technical setup is like, or how you cue your graphics, or anything, but I was super curious to ask you about this when I watched this live yesterday. Anyway, love all the work you guys do, and Loading Ready Live has quickly become one of my favorite series. I hope you guys keep making awesome stuff. :)
I'm not 100% sure how I feel about this being re-recorded. I think on balance I'm OK with it... I agree with Graham that probably neither option is particularly good. Kathleen's joke introduction as "Karen Waterluck Screwupthetelepromptermans" is a bit incongruous now, but eh, what can you do... (Also: it looks like they just recorded the monologue, the flythough is as-live. There's a cut hidden in the whip away from Paul at 3:11)
+loadingreadyrun Maybe you should have recut Beej's PowerPoint segment? The man is clearly having a heart attack live on air and no one even tried to give him CPR
Fun fact about the seraphim: Biblically, the term 'cover one's feet' is a euphemism for covering the genitalia(its a long story involving urinating in public, I believe).
If you go frame-by-frame or play the video at 0.25 speed, you can see where they edited the deck out of his hand as he "threw" it on the ground. That's the explanation for the joke.
Speaking of storage formats… At the UofA in 1987, when 1.4 and 2.8k floppies were all the rage, and expensive write-once-read-many optical drives were just coming on stream, my introductory comp-sci classes were old-school. At that time MTS was how you interacted with the computing infrastucture, and was so crusty that the instructions to feed your code files to the compilers were in the format of VIRTUAL FREAKING PUNCH CARD DECKS… bleah.
the double joke is both that nobody likes dredge (except for me. i play it in every format i can) and also that it's so complicated that nobody should play it if they've only been playing the game for at most 2 weeks
Which main mechanic? Only the lesser-used manaless dredge deck in legacy actually eskews all use of mana, the rest just don`t use it as much as other decks.
Iomega Clik disks were 40MB and about 2 inches or 5 cm across. At 128kbps they held almost 40 minutes of music. Since people were used to flipping a tape over every 30 or 45 minutes, this wasn't quite as unreasonable as it sounds. I had the disks and mp3 player and used them until I upgraded to a player with 64 MB of built in storage, and also had a slot for a Compact Flash card. I started with a 64 MB card back when that cost about $40.
While LaserDiscs were higher quality than VHS they we not High Def. at only 425 lines of resolution. But, because they were analog with no compression the picture was (depending on transfer) usually better than DVDs. (IIRR some of the non special edition DVDs of Star Wars were digitally encoded from the LaserDisc release.) Plus with the shorter recorded time CAV discs you got rock solid freeze frame.
Can I get some help finding the keep talking and nobody explodes video(s)? I am going through the youtube loadingreadylive stuff as well as the twitch stuff but I am struggling. Was it part of another video?
For Dusty Road score, cuz why not; Cori = 2 safe, drank 3, got to choose two for Ian and Alex Ian = 2 safe, *drank 5* plus 1 Cori chose Alex = 4 safe, drank 2 plus 1 Cori chose, plus the 2 mixed together
My hobby: Trying to figure out what the **** the presentation Beej freestyles on is supposed to be about. As far as I know Lagrange is the guy who put his name on the various points of gravitational equilibrium between Earth and the Moon and that certainly has nothing to do with what might be a comparison between methods engineers might use to calculate. . .something?
I normally love Featherweight's work, but his QWERPline animateds are always really uncanny valley. I think he should try a more animistic style and ditch the mouth movements.
I've come to the conclusion that the metric for how good a segment on LRR is would be how many times you hear Alex lose his shit in the background...
SmugPlatypus This is so true. His laugh is incredibly contagious
I've found that a broken Cameron also provides a good metric.
Beej Learned Magic: 0:05
Canada: The Whole Story: 0:47
Opening: 3:10
PowerPoint Karaoke: 4:06
Shame Inferno: Dusty Road: 21:26
Feed Dump: Extra Push: 38:38
Obsolete Formats Discussion: 40:03
LRRStreams Double Fortnight Highlights: 57:17
AskLRR: 1:05:54
Qwerpline Animated:1:21:24
Kathleen's Trivia Challenge: 1:25:55
Upcoming Streams: 1:52:30
Thanking of the Subs: 1:54:35
Stinger: 1:58:14
Upvote that comment to the top pls
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+
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Shaun L i
I've really missed The Whole Story. Thanks for doing it again. It seems like one of the hardest of your sketches to do in one take. Nice job, Paul!
Powerpoint Karaoke was amazing, so many quotable lines: This is Spoopifer, Spoopifer 2, Spoopifer 3, Rock Spoopifer, Fire Spoopifer, Psyduck...
"Eruptions happen some nights"
And I love how you got the two people who seem the easiest to gross out to watch the Shame Inferno. Such good reactions from the players and the watchers.
So THIS is where Paul got the inspiration for "Paul eats a delicious pastry". 1:11:30
I love how Graham said Post-Prereleases aren't things, now 3 years in the future we have one lol
YES! Nigel Fitzgerald Brouwer is back! Put it directly into my eyes!
CAN WE HAVE MORE DUSTY ROADS??!?!?
Paul nails the intro! Suddenly very nostalgic for "The Whole Story."
As someone who's used Ansys, I loved Beej's powerpoint karaoke.
Out of curiosity, and because I'd really rather not sift through a whole load of technical websites, what the hell is an Ansys?
@@DewMan001 Mathematical Analysis tool, you use it to produce more complicated graphs and solve or look at equations and data.
@@Gcsmith12 oh... That sounds a lot less sexy than Beej made it out to be
I think Graham's Powerpoint Karaoke would have been a LOT better if he did the word emphasis thing that he does in the Dave's Parking lot/ Lumber and lumbar support Crapshots.
[G] I absolute should've just gone for it.
Promise me you'll do it next time.
That would have been great. Beej sounded extra out of breath during his presentation.
One of my favorites so far, keep at it LRR!!
You had me cracking up at the intro. Great work!
Kathleen's edible nightshade question is actually a better hint than expected. because both tomatoes and eggplants are foods you can grow in the garden with Nanako in P4G . :)
I think I have to get a Twitch account just for my daily dose of LRR! really loving your LoadingReadyLIVE everyweek! :) keep up the shenanigans!
Thanks for picking my question guys :D
Possibly my favorite moment of this whole show was when Alex ceased to function after drinking the powdered peanut butter. Ian is gagging for help, and Alex just *stops* for a very long time, like a hung up and about to crash program that has been fed something it doesn't understand.
Either that or the second time Alex.exe stops working.
Good News, by the way: I've fixed the buzzer software (hopefully) so they should be available by the next episode!
I'll never forget what Beej taught me: A finite amount of penetration is necessary to maintain equilibrium.
These get better and better every week! new favorite thing.
I couldn't hear most of what Beej said after 31:43 on Dusty Road. Maybe add some subtitles.
"Fish and chip batter"
What were the two things that Alex mixed?
Brown Gravy and Lemon Poppy Seed Muffin Mix.
I am so stoked at the triumphant return of the trivia challenge!
Graham throwing in the "but did you know" where he almost went full Mikey had me laughing so hard
19:02 Beej gives "The Talk"
41:32 Old Storage Formats: I never owned one, but if my friends' experiences were any indication, Iomega drives/media were notoriously unreliable. The drives also came in three different flavors -- SCSI for Macs (and Amigas), IDE for PC internal drive bays, and parallel port as an external PC device. This last one was unmitigated crap, so naturally it was the most popular.
SyQuest predates Iomega by a few years, but their devices weren't very reliable, either. Since it was basically a removable hard drive platter, the major problem was keeping dust out of the mechanism. It lived mostly on the Mac, since it was only available with a SCSI interface.
There was also a third removable media format that came very late -- the Castlewood ORB. Like the SyQuest, this was a removable hard drive platter (2GB storage each), but they seemed to have the dust issue better managed. They were also less expensive than SyQuest's equivalent offerings. I ended up buying one of these and a handful of blank media, and used them on a regular basis for a while. They actually worked _mostly_ okay, but alas, Castlewood never caught on and the format (and company) died.
48:45 Video Discs: The format you're thinking of (competitor to the laser VideoDisc) is CED -- Capacitance Electronic Disc, originally developed by RCA. And yes, it was terrible.
50:59 Burning CDs: Is Paul describing the Pioneer CD burner? 'Cause that thing was sensitive as hell. And you could only burn at 1x speed. And you had to disconnect the computer from the network so the machine wouldn't get distracted and let the buffers in the burner drain and leave you with _another_ $5.00 coaster. I got to burn a bunch of CDs with ever-evolving versions of my 3DO game back in the day...
Tape is still a viable data storage medium, usually for long-term backups. Reliability is achieved by using high-quality tape and _massive_ amounts of error correction. The current generation is LTO-7. Blank tapes are cheap, but the drives are nasty expensive, and usually need SCSI or SAS controllers. (You guys *do* have a backup regimen for all your data, don't you?)
LS-120 FO LYFE!
Christ I remember burning coasters. There was nothing like the sickening feeling of "Did I remember to disable the screen saver?" and not being able to move the mouse to check.
Still waiting impatiently for the theme song mp3.
OMG!!! Beej doing that powerpoint made my face hert from laughing
I'll admit it. I missed Nigel Fitzgerald Brouer, so when i saw the beginning I was smiling like there' was no tomorrow.
WHAT WAS BEEJ's PRESENTATION ABIUT?!?!?
Google "finite element analysis". It's basically how engineers predict the stresses on their designs - how well they'll work, how they might fail.
FEA is broadly about bending, as it's one of the deformation modes that FEA can be applied to analyze. The way to think about FEA is testing something before you actually build it, and one way that you'd want to test something is by seeing how far it bent when you applied a force. There's many more applications than this, too, but bending is good for slides.
modern FEM programs can take a large amount of physical forces into account (magnetism, pressure etc). They divide a material into little blocks that are connected rigidly, and calculate what happens to it and how much it pulls on it's neighbors. And they are very useful for modeling complex structures and approximating behavior where continues analytical calculations are either unavailable or will take days to complete. And yes, anytime you see a fancy checkered blue/yellow/red shaded pretty picture that's most likely where it came from.
See also CFD, computational fluid dynamics, for calculating the response of fluids around a ship for example.
P.S I hope you all indulge me basically repeatin others, I don't get to brag about knowing this stuff often.
holy shit rigid body physics have a use in real life? I learned something today, I was until now under the impression that rigid body was just the most basic model and used for games that have computational limitations
"A eruption happens, you know, some nights." Graham Stark, the S stands for savage. Pretty funny.
Damnit, did you guys re-record the opening?
Yeah, they re-recorded the monologue.
Which I think was a mistake, honestly. You do a segment live, you kinda commit to accepting whatever mistakes might happen. And if the prompter borks out (which is what happened if anyone's wondering), and everything goes a tad pear shaped for a minute, well, that's the appeal of doing it live, even if you're working off a script: the allure and risk that you're working without a net and something might indeed go wrong.
To deny that is, well, you're saying "it's live, and anything could happen", but then you're attaching an asterisk saying "unless the prompter breaks".
We triple... let's say *quadruple*-guessed ourselves on this... I don't think we'd be happy with either result, to be honest, but this is the one we uploaded, so here we are. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
As someone whose worked in live productions before, we would always re-record segments before uploading them online if the person featured in them wasn't happy with how things came out during the broadcast. So, for what it's worth, I think you guys made the right call here. If someone really wants to see the original version they can just go watch it on Twitch anyway.
Also, sort of a technical question, but in the original airing, there's a point where Paul realizes the prompter isn't going to cooperate and tries to segue into the intro anyway, which is followed by a solid 25 seconds of people clearly not knowing what to do, I'm just curious why the decision was made not to just run the intro there. Things did seem to work out in the end, as Paul was able to finish his segment, but I feel like Paul set things up in a way that allowed you to "cut your losses" (so to speak) and just run the intro prematurely, and I'm curious why that opportunity wasn't taken. I have no idea what your technical setup is like, or how you cue your graphics, or anything, but I was super curious to ask you about this when I watched this live yesterday.
Anyway, love all the work you guys do, and Loading Ready Live has quickly become one of my favorite series. I hope you guys keep making awesome stuff. :)
I'm not 100% sure how I feel about this being re-recorded. I think on balance I'm OK with it... I agree with Graham that probably neither option is particularly good.
Kathleen's joke introduction as "Karen Waterluck Screwupthetelepromptermans" is a bit incongruous now, but eh, what can you do...
(Also: it looks like they just recorded the monologue, the flythough is as-live. There's a cut hidden in the whip away from Paul at 3:11)
+loadingreadyrun Maybe you should have recut Beej's PowerPoint segment? The man is clearly having a heart attack live on air and no one even tried to give him CPR
Has anyone checked if Alex's laugh cures cancer? I think Alex's laugh cures cancer.
I am yet to hear of an active lrr fan who developed cancer. Ignoring the loophole in what I just said, it can't be a coincidence.
something "Dusty Road" esque is something they definitely need to bring back.
Fun fact about the seraphim: Biblically, the term 'cover one's feet' is a euphemism for covering the genitalia(its a long story involving urinating in public, I believe).
The true beauty of the Shame Inferno is watching a generally happy and laughing Cameron! :D
The biggest update in my wardrobe is once a year when I get the new Desert Bus shirt.
That last drink for Alex should have had the "Alex is error" overlay from the Kickstarter ISC vid over it.
Can't wait to see what the obvious winner will do for the next Shame Inferno.
Beej's QWEPLine style intros were amazing. Let him write them every week.
0:39
Beej: Claims to quit Magic, but accidently uses magic to make his deck dissappear!
He just throws it on the ground?
If you go frame-by-frame or play the video at 0.25 speed, you can see where they edited the deck out of his hand as he "threw" it on the ground. That's the explanation for the joke.
Ansys is HQd in a town about 30 minutes away from my hometown!
Alex has lucked out in both this Shame Inferno and the one in the second LoadingReadyLive
dear god, stop beej, that PowerPoint...(died from laughter).
That first summer of pokemon go when it seemed like everyone and their grandmother was out playing was so awesome. I miss that.
Speaking of storage formats… At the UofA in 1987, when 1.4 and 2.8k floppies were all the rage, and expensive write-once-read-many optical drives were just coming on stream, my introductory comp-sci classes were old-school. At that time MTS was how you interacted with the computing infrastucture, and was so crusty that the instructions to feed your code files to the compilers were in the format of VIRTUAL FREAKING PUNCH CARD DECKS… bleah.
just started watching. already having so much fun. DDDDDRRRRREEEEEDDDDDGGGGGEEEEE!!!!!
JUND UM!!!
I wish someone had Bant that archetype.
Get it, bant it?
the double joke is both that nobody likes dredge (except for me. i play it in every format i can) and also that it's so complicated that nobody should play it if they've only been playing the game for at most 2 weeks
but also that it's the least magic of any deck, it basically ignores the main mechanic
Which main mechanic? Only the lesser-used manaless dredge deck in legacy actually eskews all use of mana, the rest just don`t use it as much as other decks.
I am too young too remember these old formats but it is still fun too here about them.
32:37 Why did it go back to Ian there?
Watching the Stream Highlights, I feel like you didn't upload some replays to the LRLive channel? Will those still be coming?
Oh my God, please do Powerpoint Karaoke again, I nearly died laughing at Kathleen's one!
LMAO Beej's presentation was too good, I'm dying over here!
"Mrs. Schlitzwhistle-"
"Miss."
"Shocking."
So James is the only one keeping the crew from going completely Lord of the Flies... even though they already did that in a sketch...
26:53 Well that's the best face I've seen all week.
Iomega Clik disks were 40MB and about 2 inches or 5 cm across. At 128kbps they held almost 40 minutes of music. Since people were used to flipping a tape over every 30 or 45 minutes, this wasn't quite as unreasonable as it sounds. I had the disks and mp3 player and used them until I upgraded to a player with 64 MB of built in storage, and also had a slot for a Compact Flash card. I started with a 64 MB card back when that cost about $40.
Ian almost became a literal Shame Volcano.
I heard "...the whole story" and I was immediately all about this just like my boudoir tongs. (I got them for free covered by medicaid actually)
Alex is THE sack. The luckest of sack.
While LaserDiscs were higher quality than VHS they we not High Def. at only 425 lines of resolution. But, because they were analog with no compression the picture was (depending on transfer) usually better than DVDs. (IIRR some of the non special edition DVDs of Star Wars were digitally encoded from the LaserDisc release.) Plus with the shorter recorded time CAV discs you got rock solid freeze frame.
I demand more amazing trivia challenge!
Idk Paul, Tell me what the whole story is exactly.
ANSYS doesn't work, my Lagrange didn't convergence even after the pure penalty and the augmentation on the Lagrange
What was it about...
seriously, I really want ELI5 on that powerpoint.
I still want to know what the heck an Aerobar is...
Bubbly chocolate. Often in mint flavour.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aero_(chocolate)
The storage system stuff reminds me of my Colorado Memory Systems QIC cartridges. 120 *megabytes* per tape. Early 90's I think.
This episode opened with nigel fitzgerald brewer. I like it allready.
Epsom salts are used as a laxative. Strangely, I learned this from an episode of "This Hour Has 22 Minutes".
Can I get some help finding the keep talking and nobody explodes video(s)? I am going through the youtube loadingreadylive stuff as well as the twitch stuff but I am struggling. Was it part of another video?
Dust Road needs to be a regular segment, like once every month or so.
Half the fun is Alex losing his shit off in the distance.
The other half is Beej's mixing face.
Robofleck.
Robots + Affleck = Robofleck
PowerPoint karaoke is genius. You smart. You a genius.
For Dusty Road score, cuz why not;
Cori = 2 safe, drank 3, got to choose two for Ian and Alex
Ian = 2 safe, *drank 5* plus 1 Cori chose
Alex = 4 safe, drank 2 plus 1 Cori chose, plus the 2 mixed together
I used minidisks for awhile when i worked in radio, they were a weird data system...
I wish i had known that there was another LRL on saturday, time to make myself a LRL calendar!
Add more of these streams to the loading ready live channel plz
You can watch them on the loading ready live channel.
I love the shame inferno thing
YAAAAY quality content time :D
The fixed intro is quite nice :)
Got the river question right, thanks minute earth
i'd love to see a LRR episode with just tech stories.
31 hours of content for only 1 week! Wow you're productive! 0.0
it's almost like they do this stuff full time
You edited out paul stumbling?! This is not live!
YASS "The Whole Story"!!!
International year of the poato... that one killed me for good
How the hell, Alex?! That retribution at the end though.
wait did beej really learn to play magic?
I mean, Dredge doesn't play by the normal rules of Magic.
What was the last ting Alex drank? Lemon muffin mix and what?
brown gravy
heard the phrase 'the whole story' and could mash like fast enough.
My hobby: Trying to figure out what the **** the presentation Beej freestyles on is supposed to be about. As far as I know Lagrange is the guy who put his name on the various points of gravitational equilibrium between Earth and the Moon and that certainly has nothing to do with what might be a comparison between methods engineers might use to calculate. . .something?
excuse me.. green pickle popcorn topping? today i learned that such a weird thing exists.
38:10 i startet to cray, Alex is outa of luck
please Graham... I need this theme song music... pleaseeeee
I knew the theme from the floodzplain question
I can't hear Beej say the word 'powder' without thinking if Ball Hinckley...
Why in the world was the angel question considered offensive???
3:36 Alex=D.Va confirmed?
Ooh! Qwerpline!
Doug! I knew that had to be his completely totally for reals name! Who would willingly call themselves Beej?
Shame inferno is always a bast. The karate chop one, the pumpkin spice one and this one are my favourites.
God, Cam is so unhappy with the scoring in Kathleen's Trivia Challenge XD
I normally love Featherweight's work, but his QWERPline animateds are always really uncanny valley. I think he should try a more animistic style and ditch the mouth movements.