rabidness US

Member Profile

Real Name: Atombath
A little about me...
I joined videosift with the merge of throwawayyourtv, which was in 2006(?). I've always lurked here and rarely post anything... though commenting has increased to an exhausting pace of once or twice a month! Videosift is awesome.

Member Since: August 5, 2007
Homepage: http://www.vukebox.com
Favorite Sift: Lost in a Moment
Last Power Points used: February 8, 2017
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Comments to rabidness

kymbos says...

Hey. Now I'm only more confused. The wax thickens, if you care to see my next comment on the thread.

In reply to this comment by rabidness:
Actually, to clear up some confusion and to present something interesting, this is actually Les Nuits by Nightmares On Wax. I've sifted Nights Interlude(http://videosift.com/video/Nightmares-on-Wax-Nights-Interlude) so you can hear the comparison. Yes, Nightmares On Wax essentially remade the same song twice. Nights Interlude was released on 1995(Smokers Delight) and Les Nuits was released in 1999(Carboot Soul.) I personally prefer Nights. =)

Farhad2000 says...

Curious to hear why in your book Tom and Jerry is R. I can understand why Saving Private Ryan is PG-13 though...

In reply to this comment by rabidness:
Coming from a gamer :
I would rather see the kid playing counterstrike instead of team fortress 2.
I would rather see the kid playing a game with realistic violence with realistic consequences(screams, blood, death) than playing a cartoonish parody of violence which whitewashes nearly all consequences of the act.
I would rather see the kid watching Saving Private Ryan(rating PG-13 in my book) instead of Tom and Jerry(rating R in my book.)

I think most childhood violence happens due to the 'acceptable'(aka unreal) violence in our daily media consumption. It subconsciously debases all reality of the act. I ask you, are parents who slaughter an animal on the family farm worse human beings because the child now has an understanding of death? I hope you realize 'no.'

I know most parents want to hold onto their child's innocence as long as they can, but that's their style of parenting. It takes all kinds, right?

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