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The Clubhouse Bar
David Cameron Decides Porn is Bad for You, Blocks All Access to Pornography in UK
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<blockquote data-quote="Big Ewis" data-source="post: 584203" data-attributes="member: 57076"><p>Actually there are more, and far greater, substantial differences between you and me nick :lol:</p><p>And going online to compare yourself to others is hardly going to make me respect you, and I know you'll say you don't care but the comment is made. Deal as you will.</p><p></p><p>And I enjoyed the random inclusion of the definition of "philosophy"...I was just briefly having fun with the way you spelled it there...</p><p>how would you assess your knowledge of Ancient Greek, nick ? Honest question.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>interesting !</p><p>The thing that gets me is how South Africans have completely dropped the language. I'm sure there are street/place names in French everywhere, as their first names and surnames for example...but there isn't a trace of language it seems, though a BUNCH of Huguenots went there...</p><p></p><p></p><p>Finally: </p><p>about the non-pron films containing sex scenes, at this point we're just playing with semantics...calling it pron, NOT calling it pron...but basically yes, it would be simply a pron scene in a non-pron production. </p><p></p><p>Take the best movie of all-time for instance: when Neo is interrogated early in the film by all 3 agents, and his mouth closes up and they infiltrate him with the small robot/insect, the sci-fi masterpiece takes a turn into horror, temporarily, but for the benefit of the film as a whole. But as for the intrinsic <u>nature</u> of the scene, it is clearly horror (for specific, measurable reasons). </p><p>Elements may all contribute to a greater end, and may constructively apply to one, singular structure - but those remain heterogeneous, distinct elements inherently. Very simple math. I don't care that there is the expression "genre mixing" or wtvr you mentioned <strong>nick, </strong>there's more to debate and 'discursive' (a word you seem to fancy <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite7" alt=":p" title="Stick Out Tongue :p" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":p" />) analysis than template words or expressions.</p><p></p><p>A very good example, but not well known, is the (for this mind) masterpiece film "Fire in the Sky". The entire film is based on the legislative, societal aspects of the tale, before the last 15 minutes of the film...which are PURE sci-fi horror. Masterfully directed...</p><p>Anyways, above: the points I defend.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Big Ewis, post: 584203, member: 57076"] Actually there are more, and far greater, substantial differences between you and me nick :lol: And going online to compare yourself to others is hardly going to make me respect you, and I know you'll say you don't care but the comment is made. Deal as you will. And I enjoyed the random inclusion of the definition of "philosophy"...I was just briefly having fun with the way you spelled it there... how would you assess your knowledge of Ancient Greek, nick ? Honest question. interesting ! The thing that gets me is how South Africans have completely dropped the language. I'm sure there are street/place names in French everywhere, as their first names and surnames for example...but there isn't a trace of language it seems, though a BUNCH of Huguenots went there... Finally: about the non-pron films containing sex scenes, at this point we're just playing with semantics...calling it pron, NOT calling it pron...but basically yes, it would be simply a pron scene in a non-pron production. Take the best movie of all-time for instance: when Neo is interrogated early in the film by all 3 agents, and his mouth closes up and they infiltrate him with the small robot/insect, the sci-fi masterpiece takes a turn into horror, temporarily, but for the benefit of the film as a whole. But as for the intrinsic [U]nature[/U] of the scene, it is clearly horror (for specific, measurable reasons). Elements may all contribute to a greater end, and may constructively apply to one, singular structure - but those remain heterogeneous, distinct elements inherently. Very simple math. I don't care that there is the expression "genre mixing" or wtvr you mentioned [B]nick, [/B]there's more to debate and 'discursive' (a word you seem to fancy :p) analysis than template words or expressions. A very good example, but not well known, is the (for this mind) masterpiece film "Fire in the Sky". The entire film is based on the legislative, societal aspects of the tale, before the last 15 minutes of the film...which are PURE sci-fi horror. Masterfully directed... Anyways, above: the points I defend. [/QUOTE]
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David Cameron Decides Porn is Bad for You, Blocks All Access to Pornography in UK
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